Cambridge Wants Soaps to Go Old School

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Friday, September 5, 2008; Page C05
LONDON -- Britain's soap operas offer a steady diet of sex, scandal -- and, if Cambridge University has its way, scholarship.
Trying to shed its elitist image, Cambridge has approached the producers of Britain's three leading TV soaps about including it in their story lines.
Spokesman Greg Hayman said the idea was part of a bid to correct the perception that Cambridge is "not for young people from ordinary backgrounds."
"We're very keen to attract the brightest and best students regardless of their background," Hayman said Tuesday. "One of the better ways of communicating directly with potential students is to talk to them through the soaps and other programs they watch."
Like almost all British universities, Cambridge and its rival Oxford are government-funded, and under pressure to become more inclusive. The government wants half of all young people to attend college by 2010, which means universities need to target all economic backgrounds.
What better way than through the travails of characters on "EastEnders," "Coronation Street" and "Emmerdale" -- set respectively, in a gritty London neighborhood, a scruffy Manchester district and a farming village.
In some ways Oxford and Cambridge -- elegant, affluent universities known collectively as "Oxbridge" -- resemble Ivy League schools. But Harvard and Yale don't occupy quite the same central social perch as Oxbridge, whose graduates account for 78 percent of Britain's High Court judges, 42 percent of its top politicians and 56 percent of its senior journalists, according to the Sutton Trust, an education charity.
And while 90 percent of British students attend state high schools, Oxford and a Cambridge draw only about half their student body from there.
Many in Britain's poorer neighborhoods still view attending Oxford or Cambridge as an impossible dream. But the elitist image is unfair, according to university officials.
University administrators point out that Oxford and Cambridge are not more expensive than less esteemed universities, because tuition fees are capped by law at about $5,350 per year. Ethnic minority students are not underrepresented -- they make up 16 percent of the student body at Cambridge and 13 percent at Oxford, a slightly larger proportion than in society as a whole.
"There's a perception gap between reality and how we've been perceived previously and that takes time to change," Hayman said.
The stone buildings and elegant spires of Oxbridge have provided the backdrop for many films and TV shows, from historical drama "Chariots of Fire," set in Cambridge, to Oxford-based detective series "Inspector Morse."

