The Awake is designed for the general public and sometimes for governmental authorities to see how normal the WTS is. The real test of what is the WTS policy is what is in the study articles of the WT and what you hear coming from the mouth of the CO/DO and Bethel speakers at the conventions.
Totally true. Just a few months ago in a congo not far from here, a talk in the service meeting castigated those who would waste their time getting a secular education when "so many opportunities of service" were available to "our youth" through the congo and the WTS. The audience included a handful of "youths" who were enrolled in a local college. After the meeting, one of these students learned that the son of one of the elders had just enrolled in a four year university so he could become an engineer!
There continues to be this huge "disconnect" on education within the non-ivy-covered walls of the WTS. The liberals at Bethyl manage to sneak in a conciliatory remark now and then in some obscure Awake article. The hardliners, however, control the study articles, the kingdom ministry, and the manuscripts for delivery at conventions. Couple that with the penchant for dispursing private opinion in public that a lot of power-trip elders have, and you get conflicting information on a regular basis.