jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • Advertise a Job
  • Recruiters
  • Your Account
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

career-advice.jobs.ac.uk

Secondary Sidebar

jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility Statement

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2025

  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Careers Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility
jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2025

Avoiding an ‘Us and Them’ Attitude in CBHE

University students watching a lecture at university auditorium

At times, working in College Based Higher Education can feel like an uphill struggle. Trying to maintain academic credibility and a professional perspective can be difficult in the often chaotic nature of CBHE, where many smaller-scale HE providers rely on a minimal number of teaching staff to cover both FE and HE delivery. The pressure is on to give learners the best Higher Education experience they deserve and for those tutors with majority HE teaching, the very last thing they need is further tension in the form of a potential ‘us versus them’ mentality from FE colleagues or college management. It’s certainly not a widespread phenomenon, but when it occurs it can be an unwelcome distraction and only add to the pressures on a lecturer.

Many FE tutors and managers have worked exclusively within the sector and, quite rightly, are protective of what they view as the core business of a Further Education college. Introducing HE programmes generates considerable developmental work, often outside the experience of management and tutors alike, regardless of how meticulously planned the strategy of implementation might be. There are, therefore, practical and financial reasons that some managers – and teaching staff – feel there is no place for Higher Education within their FE college. Additionally, in some cases, the belief can develop that HE within FE fosters feelings of elitism. When this happens, it can be destructive to staff and students alike.

Anyone working across FE and HE will know that elitism does not come into it. Balancing FE and HE preparation, teaching and assessment is hard work, but most tutors will admit cross-level delivery has many advantages; learners get to build close relationships with the staff during their FE studies, often playing a major factor in them continuing to Higher Education. Innovations within FE delivery can be successfully transposed to HE, and HE developments in research and scholarly activity might find a place in Level 3 studies. It means the cross-level tutor has to academically raise and lower their game on a daily – sometimes hourly – basis, and managing the shift between levels can be very difficult. Nevertheless, they still see the merits of these two distinct approaches to education – distinct, not inferior or superior – despite the effort involved.

For those colleges whose provision includes HE-only or HE-majority delivery staff, active proponents of an elitist attitude can lead to an environment of negativity and distrust. It is, therefore, down to management to ensure such a situation is avoided and, where it might be perceived to have occurred, do their best to defuse it. If not tackled promptly, it can lead to staff abandoning HE delivery, moving to another institution or giving up on education completely – hardly in the interests of the learners or the college in which they work. The fact remains that the good majority of staff delivering HE either teach both FE and HE or have experience of FE leading up to their Higher Education transition. Consequently, they fully understand and appreciate the value of Further Education and what the primary function of an FE college is.

Equally so, CBHE can offer students from socially disadvantaged areas a unique learning environment and the opportunity for non-traditional learners to re-train or return to studies. They do not see their work developing and promoting Higher Education as elitist, but aspirational. Any differentiated teaching areas, facilities and faculties can be an inspiration to current and future FE students who recognise they have the potential to continue their academic and professional development in an environment that is accessible and familiar to them, rather than be faced with the financial implications of travelling away from home. This is, thankfully, the majority view held across CBHE, and one that should be maintained and nurtured. To help support and promote this, management should ensure all levels of delivery are seen for their positives and work in conjunction with, not against, each other. Given the enormous daily pressures on all teaching staff, the elitism versus aspiration argument is not one tutors teaching at any level – or managers – have the time for.

What did you think of our article? - please rate

0 / 5. 0


Share this article

Reader Interactions

Written by Careers Advice

You may also like:

  • What's the difference between FE and HE Lecturers?

    What's the difference between FE and HE Lecturers?

  • The impact of Further Education (FE) phone policies

    The impact of Further Education (FE) phone policies

  • college students Participating in Engineering Class

    What are the benefits of working in Further Education?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

3 − two =

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Follow us

Learn how to manage a lack of feedback when job searching

Latest Jobs

  • Programme Manager - Education & Childcare

    Keighley College

    Location: Keighley

    Salary: £38,651 - £42,223 per annum


  • Lecturers - PMLD and SLD - 1 permanent post; 1 fixed term post until 14th July 2026

    HRUC

    Location: Hayes, Uxbridge

    Salary: £32,455 - £45,260 per annum including London Weighting Teacher training provided


  • Biology Teacher

    Health & Life Science, De Montfort University International College

    Location: Leicester

    Salary: £32.50 per hour


  • Lecturer in Foundation Learning

    Nottingham College

    Location: Nottingham

    Salary: £32,445 - £40,560 per annum (pro-rata for part-time posts)


  • Programme Leader – Teacher Development (ECF and ECTE)

    About UCL Institute of Education, UCL

    Location: London, Hybrid

    Salary: £67,341 - £75,192


  • Lecturer in Education (PGCE Primary)

    Faculty of Social Sciences - School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of East Anglia

    Location: Norwich

    Salary: £38,784 Starting salary from £38,784 per annum, dependent on skills and experience, with an annual increment up to £46,049 per annum.