Education

University Language Course Cuts Threaten Social Mobility, Warn Experts

Published July 5, 2026
Leading academics and former education secretaries have raised urgent concerns that cuts to modern languages provision at universities risk undermining social mobility and vocational skills for working-class pupils. The University of Exeter recently announced plans to cut 150 full-time posts, predominantly in humanities, placing more than 70 languages academics at risk of redundancy. This follows proposals by the University of Nottingham to become the first Russell Group institution to eliminate language degrees entirely, signalling a deepening crisis in higher education language provision. Experts warn that reducing access to language learning in higher education creates significant barriers for disadvantaged students, limiting their opportunities to develop the cultural capital and communication skills valued by employers. With falling exam entries at school level already reducing the pipeline of linguists, these university cuts threaten to sever pathways for working-class pupils into global professions and vocational sectors requiring multilingual capabilities. For local authorities, these developments pose challenges for social mobility strategies and skills planning. As corporate parents and champions of inclusive economic growth, council cabinet members must consider how shrinking language provision affects young people's employment prospects and the availability of specialist teachers needed for schools. The trend highlights the need for strengthened partnerships between local government, universities and employers to protect language skills as a public good essential for future workforce development.

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