Graduates wish they had done an apprenticeship

Posted on 13 Mar 2013 by Tim Brown

According to a recent poll of 1,774 people who graduated in the last two years, 76% said they were not informed about the alternatives to university before leaving school.

Of these, more than half (54%) said they would have picked an apprenticeship or vocational training route instead of their degree had had they received better information.

The top reasons why the graduates would have opted for vocational training as opposed to university were to avoid debt (77 per cent); to gain a better position at work (61 per cent) and because of a belief that it would be less stressful than university (39 per cent). Around a third (31 per cent) said that they were now in an industry for which their degree was “completely irrelevant”.

The survey was conducted by www.notgoingtouni.co.uk, a website offering students information on the opportunities that exist away from university.

“Many are pushed into university and later regret studying for a degree. It’s clearly a huge problem, because the overwhelming majority of recent graduates were not told about apprenticeships or vocational training as an option. This is simply not good enough and the young people of today are being let down.”