At last someone is getting the picture. The CBI chief, John Cridland, wants to widen the curriculum to include vocational subjects with the same value as academic ones. He, at least, has recognised that not all pupils are academically minded yet still need the skills to get them into work.
Focussing purely on core subjects and the Arts leaves many pupils disenfranchised.
When I was at secondary school we had practical subjects such as woodwork, metalwork, textiles, horti/agriculture where the focus was on learning their techniques and their technical intricacies and then producing something. When pupils left they already had a grounding in such things as brazing, welding, lathe work, dressmaking, haberdashery, gardening and landscaping. They were primed for entry into many trades and could use their hands as well as their brains.
We have lost all that in thinking that everyone and his dog can go to university.