Our health services are chronically under-staffed after
years of austerity (for which no one ever made a credible case, but that’s a
different debate) and we desperately need to train up all the capable people we
can. And there are plenty of very capable people, many of whom are already in
demanding responsible health-related jobs. They want to take a step up, to take
on more senior roles, to gain the skills and knowledge that a healthcare
professional needs in the modern world.
They queue in droves to make the leap on to the healthcare professional
career ladder by going back into higher education to gain the relevant
qualifications, knowledge, skills and experience.
But for many it can seem a leap too far. These are the people
who, for a variety of reasons, haven’t been in higher education (or maybe in
any kind of formal education) for many years. Some struggled through school
battling undiagnosed conditions such as dyslexia, and ended up feeling
inadequate, as though their inability to learn the same way their peers did was
all their fault.
There is a gap to bridge. Operating at higher education
level is not simply a matter of stepping through the door and taking education
on board. Basically, it involves reading, writing and thinking. We can all do
all three – so how hard can it be?
Consider this: you’ve never done any scuba diving but you’d
like to. You know how to swim because you go to your local pool occasionally
and do a few lengths; you know how to breathe; you’ve been doing it all your
life. So if you wanted to scuba dive in the ocean, all you would need to do is take
a boat out to deep water, strap on a tank and jump in. Right?
Wrong (of course). You’d be lucky to survive the experience.
Stepping up to higher education is the same, but the
negative effects of getting it wrong are not quite so immediate as the scuba
diving example.
You won’t drown or die from the bends or get disorientated
in deep water and never see the sun again, but you will feel a sense of
drowning in words if you don’t learn ways to read, absorb and critically
evaluate huge amounts of information; you will despair at ever putting together
a coherent argument if you don’t hone your thinking skills and learn to
distinguish fact, from opinion, bias from evidence, and to recognise the tricks
that are used to derail logical thought.
Your ability to read, write and think had better take a huge
leap forward if you are to keep your head above the higher education waterline.
Preparing for Higher Education Study isn’t just a book
title, it’s something you need to do if you want to emerge from the deep waters
of higher education unscathed, stronger and ready to take on the world.
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