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"Something is throttling the industry's new blood"

Frontier Developments founder weighs in on the issue of declining industry entrants

Seeing Gordon Brown boasting about the games industry as ‘leading the way in Europe’ is rich. Since 2001 we have seen educational standards decline, inward investment discouraged, and other countries steal a march on us with tax breaks. So much for “education, education, education”; so much for “Digital Britain”. They have let our industry down.

There has been plenty of talking about issues for our industry with inward investment, the rise of tax breaks in competing jurisdictions and so arguments for ‘levelling the playing field’ in the UK, so I won’t go over those here but in comparison there has been little discussion about the parlous state of education, and how it affects our industry with the lack of educated candidates.

Student numbers applying to study key “STEM” subjects (science, technology, engineering and maths) are declining dramatically in the UK, particularly in computer science. We need these skills as a country, not just for the games industry.

For example, since 2001 the number of applicants to computer science courses at university in the UK has halved (fallen by 52 per cent) – and this is over a period when university attendance has increased by 24 per cent. Meanwhile the number of employed IT professionals in the UK (not just games) has continued to increase over the same period. This is a very serious problem for computer science courses, including here at Cambridge. Some have chosen to drop standards to get more people on to their courses and avoid bankruptcy. Something is very wrong, and it is throttling the new programming blood coming into our industry.

There are a number of possible reasons. Government has incentivised the university sector to get ‘bums on seats’ – and it really doesn’t matter to them how clever or suited to the course that ‘bum’ is. There is no minimum quality standard, but the university is penalised financially if the student fails the course. This has caused the rise of the ‘soft’ course; courses which are designed to be very easy, mostly variants on media studies, many of which have been based around games.

Having said that, I don’t think that is the main reason for the stark decline, as you can see for yourself in the shocking graph on the [right], courtesy of the CPHC and eskills. Anecdotally, asking students which subject was the most boring for them in school, almost without exception they say ‘ICT’ (information and communication technology). Put cruelly, ICT is the ability to find the power switch on a computer, and use Microsoft Word and Excel at a basic level. We know something has destroyed interest in computer science, and ICT is the most likely candidate, especially given the timing of the drop in applicants.

ICT is a direct result of a political edict, via the National Curriculum. It was clearly well intentioned, trying to give all children a basic knowledge of IT, but as with many ill-considered political initiatives, it seems to have had this somewhat inevitable consequence, especially since the majority of the children on many such courses may be more knowledgeable then their teacher (since any available teacher can and does teach ICT).

Much as the UK has reaped the substantial benefits of the BBC Micro generation in the early 80s (like me), the UK will reap this negative whirlwind in future years. Though clearly damage has been done, our industry can still be a force for change for the better.

We are one of the few UK-based industries that can clearly motivate young people to engage with education. I have given talks at universities, even marked coursework (not for the faint hearted), and I know many others do so too, like Blitz and SCEE. But this is not what I am talking about. Games can be used in class to engage children with more advanced concepts, but this needs changes to the National Curriculum – for example to allow the brighter kids to swap ICT for computer science at GCSE level and earlier.

The current government has been in a state of paralysis for a long time. Government ministers have heard the arguments for tax breaks and ignored them. They have heard those for encouraging inward investment and ignored them. They have heard the arguments detailed here on education, and yes, ignored them. There are a few clarion voices within government who do care (Tom Watson, for example), but many of the key people are too busy clinging on to power and expense accounts, while hoping we will forget about the mess they have created.

I have high hopes for the opposition (with people like Ed Vaizey, Don Foster and Nigel Evans), and for the new blood (of all colours) coming in at the next election. There is even talk of election promises. Let’s hope it will make a difference. As I think Al Capone said “Vote early, vote often!”

Blame the government?

posted by Iain Smith Apr 29, 2010 at 10:57 am
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Iain Smith

I think its important to bear in mind that complex issues like these cannot be pinned on simply one person or establishment. Yes, the government haven't held their end of the bargain, but the industry could do a damn sight more too.

Only of late has the action of industry bodies pushed hard enough to be heard. What if there had been positive, well-conceived actions from the IGDA, ELSPA and TIGA earlier in Labour's term of office?

In addition, those industry commentators, including yourself, who gripe about the problems with student integration and the correct education are evidently well-meaning but subsequently not spending enough time or effort doing something about it. Students, given the opportunity, would follow all the best practice. Universities, given good guidance from a collective of savvy industrial partners, would do the things needed to make the education better. But there's the issue that those industry commentators are 'concerned' but perhaps not concerned enough to make it their full-time problem and devote enough of their efforts to do something about it. Its either full time games devolopment with a pinch of industry commentry and event appearances, or nothing. Which from my perspective, as a student waiting to break into the industry, isn't good enough.

If these gripes are aired publicly, they only serve to rile those who have to go through the system as it is. Yes, discontent is a great segway to action, but I'm continually hearing nothing about the latter.

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Correction....

posted by Iain Smith Apr 29, 2010 at 11:02 am
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Iain Smith

Apologies that I overlooked the 'marking' and time you've spent in that sense. But the argument remains; pockets of 'action' aren't going to solve this issue.

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