The way i see it, anyone can get into Uni (ie. alternate entry, pre-allocated spaces for Indigenous Australians, mature-age students, bridging courses, TAFE / private college articulation programs, OUA etc).
But attending classes, understanding the content, PASSing the classes and getting a decent job out of it at the end of it all is another thing all together.
I'm a mature-age student (27) who works full-time, i see a lot of younger students in my night classes who just don't give a rats ass about being there, i actually told one off last week for wasting the lecturers, the other students and my time, he ended up leaving the class a few minutes after this.
I'm not saying the entry requirements should be tighter or harder, but still, i guarantee you that quite a lot of students don't even finish the 1st year, think about it, have a look around your classes and count how many students you remember from your 1st year (obviously this might be a bit hard with flexible delivery, differing timetables, deferrals and diferent majors / minors), but alas, i hope you see my point.
I always regretted not going to uni straight out of school, but i feel that i'm better prepared to engage in higher level study now than i was 9 years ago when i finished the HSC.
Apologies, i've gone off on an old-man tangent here, but what i'm trying to get at is that University IS something that is revered and looked up to.
Getting straight pass concededs and not grasping the concept of higher learning is not.
Trust me, distinguished companies WILL ask for your transcript and WILL check your performance over your entire Uni "career", because that's what it is. Your career started on Day 1 of Uni, not at graduation or after landing your first job or Internship.
Peace, kids.
Regards
Adam