There was a radio debate the other week about the importance to bereaved relatives of treating death as death rather than obscuring it with terms such as 鈥減assing away鈥.
Dealing in euphemisms might seem kind, it was suggested, but all it really does is avoid dealing with the reality of the situation.
Margaret Thatcher鈥檚 family might raise an eyebrow at this in light of some of the bitter responses to her demise, but it鈥檚 true that euphemisms seem increasingly ubiquitous.
This is particularly true when those in power wish to camouflage difficult decisions: a favourite of Chancellor George Osborne鈥檚 is 鈥渉ard-working people鈥 - by which he seems to mean 鈥減eople barely earning enough to live鈥.
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But what of higher education?
It is vital to offer a broad curriculum, and demand shifts from year to year; it would be a mistake to retreat en聽masse to a small clutch of identikit courses
Fifteen years ago, in times of plenty, the government prioritised three 鈥淓s鈥: 鈥渆ducation, education, education鈥. Today鈥檚 equivalents are 鈥渆fficiency, efficiency, efficiency鈥.
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Clearly being efficient is a good thing - few people would argue for inefficiency.
But although its use may be accurate and necessary in some instances, in others it seems disingenuous or downright dishonest.
In this week鈥檚 探花视频 we cover a range of issues relating to the 鈥渆fficiency鈥 drive as it affects the sector.
In our cover feature, Sir Steve Smith, vice-chancellor of the University of Exeter, warns about the grave threat of further deep cuts to public funding.
Universities, which have already endured a period of great uncertainty, wait with bated breath for the outcome of the coming spending review in June, and even greater uncertainty awaits after the next general election.
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Not only will the Treasury be seeking immediate 鈥渆fficiencies鈥, but there is also widespread acceptance that the new student fees and loans system is unsustainable and will need a major overhaul in the next Parliament.
In our opinion pages, meanwhile, we feature two sides of the deeply entrenched dispute at the University of Sussex over the institution鈥檚 decision to outsource its catering and facilities work.
The university鈥檚 position is that taking a 鈥渇resh look at how higher education works鈥 is in the 鈥渂est traditions of the university鈥, although it concedes that it does need to cut 拢500,000 from its annual catering deficit. Opponents, however, say that the endless drive for 鈥渆fficiencies鈥 puts the very spirit of higher education in jeopardy and that the plans risk divorcing Sussex from its local community.
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Finally, we highlight in our news pages the number of courses offered by universities that fail to enrol any students despite the 鈥渨eeding鈥 that has gone on in some institutions.
Again, there are questions of efficiency, because offering a course will always require time, energy and, yes, some money regardless of whether anyone applies to it.
But here, too, there is a danger in focusing on efficiency alone: it is vital that our higher education sector offers a broad curriculum, and demand shifts from year to year, so it would be a mistake to retreat en masse to a small clutch of identikit courses.
Efficiency is important (more so than ever in straitened times), but we must be clear about what it means, the motivations behind it and its (sometimes ugly) consequences. It must also remain just one factor of many in shaping the higher education system we want.
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