"Cuts to research into education must be halted," says the British Educational Research Association (February 6). I disagree. Research into education produces calamitously stupid ideas that are put into practice in schools.
The results are plain to see: undergraduates with three As at A level who cannot find their way round a library catalogue, do not know how to write an essay and are almost illiterate in their mother tongue. As a result, universities must devote resources to equipping students with the basic academic skills they have failed to acquire in 13 years of schooling.
Educationists have created this situation. I see no reason why they ought not to pay for it.
Richard Austen-Baker
Coventry