I don鈥檛 quite get the 鈥淚鈥檝e been teaching 30聽years, why do I need a qualification?鈥 argument. (鈥State puts weight behind teaching qualification data鈥, News, 29 August.) If experience is so superior, why do we offer degrees?
Let鈥檚 try a little experiment. Critics of the suggestion should work their way through the聽following list: cutting hair; driving; eye聽testing; defending clients in court; pulling teeth; performing appendectomies; flying commercial airliners; analysing cervical smears; supervising PhDs; teaching in primary schools; teaching in secondary schools; teaching in university. At which point would you be happy to accept a lack of qualifications? I聽suspect that most people would stop at cutting hair, especially if it were their own hair聽being cut at the time of the revelation.
Yes, I鈥檓 being silly. But the argument against teaching qualifications is pretty silly, too, particularly if the best reason that can be given is 鈥淚鈥檓 too busy doing research to get one鈥. I鈥檓 sure that will fill potential students with nothing but confidence.
Jonathan Baldwin
Cambridge
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