Britain’s surprising, upstart universities
A handful of new institutions are set on upending higher education
SIR JAMES DYSON, a designer of whizzy home appliances who became a billionaire, has long complained that Britain pumps out too few engineers. So a few years ago he set out to mint graduates of his own. A mini-university he created at his company’s glassy research facility in Wiltshire now has about 160 youngsters enrolled, all in engineering. They spend two days a week in lessons and the rest working on real products, for which they earn a salary. They pay no fees and incur no loans. Instead of residential halls, newcomers live in timber “pods” stacked near Dyson’s labs; on a sunny September afternoon they stand ready for incoming freshers. Two undergraduates say they turned down Cambridge for the chance to attend.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Degrees of change”
Britain September 16th 2023
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- Why more English councils will go bust
- The (not so) great escape
- Britain’s surprising, upstart universities
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- Centrists need to stop worrying and learn to love politics
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