Qualifications included diplomas, bachelor's, master's and doctorate research degrees; by the time of dissolution, it had awarded more than 1.3 million degrees and other academic awards. The CNAA awarded
academic degrees at
polytechnics,
central institutions and other non-university institutions such as colleges of higher education until they were awarded university status. When the CNAA was wound up, the
British government asked the
The Open University to continue the work of awarding degrees in the remaining non-university institutions. Additionally, the OU has responsibility for CNAA records. The CNAA, through its many subject panels, oversaw the degree-awarding powers of polytechnics. Above all, the CNAA saw itself as preserving a comparability at the national level with degree level awards in universities, a feature which can be seen as having both positive and negative aspects: positive in that it preserved a formal "parity of esteem" between the awards of the two parts of the
binary system (such as retaining the common currency of the undergraduate degree for entry to postgraduate study), but other scholars viewed it as negative because it encouraged an "academicism" in the new sector and slowed an acceptance of the transformations required finally to break the boundaries of the old, "elite" system. In the event, the polytechnics were associated with many innovations, including
women's studies, the academic study of
communications and
media,
sandwich degrees, advanced
engineering degrees in all functional specialities, and the rise of management and
business studies; not least, they were much more responsive than older institutions in providing for the admission of non-standard students from technical colleges, advanced apprenticeships and other sources. == Patronage and governance ==