Vacuum cleaner man James Dyson talks about his school for young engineers
鈥淲hen I was at school I was told: 鈥業f you don鈥檛 work harder, you鈥檒l end up in a factory.鈥 Well, I have and I love it.鈥 This is a favourite anecdote of James Dyson, who gave the world the bagless vacuum cleaner and numerous other practical inventions.
Not just an inventor, and manufacturer, Dyson has become an ardent evangelist for this most unalluring of careers. This week he launched his most ambitious charitable project to date 鈥 a glorified sixth-form college for design, innovation and engineering, which will open in 2008. He will contribute 拢12.5m through his own charitable trust, the James Dyson Foundation, to the 拢22m college in Bath. Among other charitable donors will be the Happold Trust, set up by engineer Buro Happold, which is based locally.
鈥淐ulturally, we now despise engineering in a sort of inverse snobbery,鈥 says Dyson. He cites figures showing that China and India produce up to 19 times as many engineering graduates as the UK.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 want that product label saying 鈥楳ade in China鈥 to change to 鈥楧esigned and made in China鈥, we鈥檝e got to get a lot cleverer. We need to start with education and we need to form the next generation of designers and .鈥
If we don鈥檛 want all the labels to say 鈥楧esigned and made in China鈥, we鈥檝e got to get a lot cleverer
James Dyson
Hence the new college, which has been christened the Dyson School of Design Innovation. Its core subject will be engineering, but Dyson admits that the word was dropped from the title because of its stigma. As one of 23 鈥渟kills academies鈥 in vocational training set up under a government white paper published last year, it has been recognised as the UK鈥檚 first National Centre of Excellence for design, engineering and enterprise. It is planned to teach some 2500 16-18 year olds for a new diploma in design engineering, which should be recognised as an entrance qualification for university. The college also aims to catch them young, by teaching 14-16 year olds for one day a week.
If Dyson鈥檚 mission is to make engineering cool again, he cuts the perfect figure for doing so. Tall, lithe and aged 59, he has short-cropped grey hair, blue eyes, bold features and a ready smile. He wears a tight-fitting pullover and pants in matching navy blue with Converse trainers in black and white.
Though he claims not to be in competition with existing courses in technology, he criticises them for becoming 鈥渕ore and more written and less and less practical鈥. He goes on: 鈥淏ut you can only really learn from mistakes. If something breaks, you can learn from it.鈥 With this in mind, students will be encouraged to put engineering products to the test.
鈥淲e want to show how exciting engineering can be,鈥 he says.
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