skipToContent
United KingdomHE higher-ed

Why traditional lectures no longer match the skills economy

The PIE News United Kingdom
Why traditional lectures no longer match the skills economy
Ask most employers what they struggle to find, and the answer is rarely knowledge. What they do struggle to find is capability. The ability to apply ideas, make decisions, and operate in uncertain environments. Yet much of higher education is still designed to deliver knowledge first and capability second. Today, information is instant. AI can generate explanations, summaries, and technical outputs in seconds. Knowledge is no longer the constraint it once was. Yet the dominant learning experience remains unchanged: one expert delivering content to a largely passive audience. The question is no longer whether lectures have value. The question is whether they should still sit at the centre of higher education. The issue is not that lectures exist. At their best, they can inspire, clarify, and introduce complex ideas. The problem is that they remain the default. They scale well and are efficient, but they are not designed to build capability. In a labour market that values judgement, adaptability, and applied thinking, that distinction matters. Employers are not struggling to find graduates who have been exposed to knowledge. They are struggling to find graduates who can apply it. The university lecture system was designed for a different era, not for today’s diverse student population. The capabilities in demand are consistent across sectors: communication, collaboration, critical thinking, adaptability, and judgement under uncertainty. These are not developed through passive learning. When information can be generated instantly, the value of simply knowing things declines. What becomes more valuable is the ability to question, interpret, apply, and decide under uncertainty A student can succeed in exams and still struggle in environments that require initiative, resilience, and practical decision-making. This reflects a deeper misalignment between educational design and workplace reality – one that AI is now making harder to ignore. When information can be generated instantly, the value of simply knowing things declines. What becomes more valuable is the ability to question, interpret, apply, and decide under uncertainty. Capability begins to outweigh knowledge, yet higher education still largely prioritises delivering and assessing content. One of the most persistent misconceptions in education is that exposure to information creates understanding. It does not. People learn when they actively engage with ideas, apply them in context, receive feedback, and refine their thinking. This is where experiential learning becomes critical not as a superficial engagement tool, but as a structured way to build capability. In practice, that means moving students from passive consumption to active participation: real-world projects, simulations, collaborative challenges, and applied tasks requiring decision-making. These approaches develop judgement increasingly one of the most valuable capabilities in a world shaped by AI. Students today are preparing for uncertainty, not stable careers. Many will work in roles that will change significantly or didn’t exist a decade ago. In that context, higher education cannot focus primarily on knowledge transfer. It must develop the ability to adapt, think critically, collaborate, and keep learning. This is the thinking behind models like Adaptive Chunked Experiential Learning (ACEL) which we have designed at the International Humanitarian College of London (IHCL), where the emphasis moves towards structured challenge, reflection, feedback, and real-world relevance. The objective is not just to teach, but to build capability. Higher education does not need to abandon lectures. Far from it. But it does need to rethink what they are for. Content is no longer scarce. Context, application, feedback, and challenge are. The focus must shift from what students know to what they can actually do. If the model stays focused on delivering knowledge, it will continue to produce graduates who know more but can do less. That is the gap employers are already calling out. Most universities won’t change quickly. The question is which ones will to the benefit of the future workforce. About the author: Dr Rod Brazier is managing director and co-founder of International Humanitarian College of London (IHCL). He is an experienced higher education leader and brings a passion for educational and social mobility to his role. He has held senior positions across UK institutions and is deeply committed to transforming learning for today’s students. Rod is an advocate for widening participation and offering opportunities to those from underrepresented groups. Through focussed staff development initiatives he ensures that academic teams engage and mentor students by delivering experiential learning in order that students can equip themselves with the skills necessary to succeed in their future lives and careers. The post Why traditional lectures no longer match the skills economy appeared first on The PIE News .
Share
Original story
Continue reading at The PIE News
thepienews.com
Read full article

Summary generated from the RSS feed of The PIE News. All article rights belong to the original publisher. Click through to read the full piece on thepienews.com.