Without mentioning another thread the notion of industry people teaching on TV production course and etc was brought up.
I was at a meeting in Birmingham with the BBC on Friday and it was increasingly clear that the ooportunities for new writers to break in are proabably at the lowest they have ever been and getting harder all the time. On the flipside to this there seems to be an increasing number of scriptwriting etc courses at colleges and Unis and the like. Plus the associated malarkey of scriptwriting festivals etc etc. The BBC are even doing it themselves with their writers academy and doctors writers academy. SO a massive amount of course and people training people up, supposedly, for very a limited amount of opportunities. Now for Art based course I think this is fine but am not so sure about vocational courses. It seems a little disengenous to me and raises people's expectations sometimes deliberately falsely.
I did an MA in film production/directing but wrote a script for my final project which was where my intentions lay anyway, but I did want to ponce about making some short films and probably will again next year for my own amusement.
What does the panel think about this level of high level of supposed vocational training for limited opportunities? Or is it that people are training people to go on to train people in courses. I know an awful lot of people who train people to scritpwrite on all sorts of levels of different courses but don't actually write professionally themselves and some of their students go on to do the same - including people I was at film school with fifteen years ago.