Does Europe have the same problem as America does with it's attitude towards education and intelligence? My experience in America is that we like the benefits of science, but we don't like actual science. The average American likes the idea of having smart, educated people, but they don't really want them around. Charisma is valued over intelligence. A large portion of the population wants to send kids off to college, and have them come back unchanged except for having a certificate that says they deserve a better paying job. I think there are a lot of college students that go through school with that goal in mind, too.
This is a systemic problem with the American education system. We just want the symbols of learning, not the actual learning itself. There's some bizarre mix of being afraid of intelligence (and fear of being wrong/stupid/etc), combined with thinking that most people can't be taught, throw in a heavy dose of "you have to cheat the system to get anywhere in life", more than a little "colleges are liberal brainwashing", some "only social outcasts care about <insert academic subject here>", and a political system that actively relies on trying to get the most predictable people (aka, the ones that think the least) to be the only ones who consistently go to the pools.
I'm struggling to come up with the ideal analogy, but it's kinda like bullshit bullet points on tech products. Just having a digital camera on a device isn't a selling feature anymore. Hell, having a 10+ megapixel digital camera doesn't mean shit anymore, because there are so many terrible cameras with high pixel counts. But it's actually worse than that, because putting digital camera on a cordless drill, just to have one more bullet point, doesn't benefit anyone. Trying to put everyone through the existing college system is like slapping a digital camera on every electronic product, and expecting that to increase profits for the entire industry.