48 years on from a significant moment for the OU
Speech in Glasgow 8 September 1963 by the Leader of HM Opposition, Harold Wilson.
Today I want to outline new proposals on which we are working, a dynamic programme providing facilities for home study to university and higher technical standards, on the basis of a University of the Air and of nationally organized correspondence college courses.
These will be intended to cater for a wide variety of potential students. There are technicians and technologists who perhaps left school at sixteen or seventeen and who, after two or three years in industry, feel that they could qualify as graduate scientists or technologists. There are many others, perhaps in clerical occupations, who would like to acquire new skills and new qualifications. There are many in all levels of industry who would desire to become qualified in their own or other fields, including those who had no facilities for taking GEC at 0 or A level, or other required qualifications; or housewives who might like to secure qualifications in English Literature, Geography or History.
February 10th, 2012 at 9:50 pm
[…] voice in my head saying that this wasn’t really what the OU was set up to do … as the History of the OU blog confirms. Will the hoped for increase in younger students really be sufficient to sustain the university […]