Universities are admitting students whose A-level results are up to five grades below offer, head warns

Chris Ramsey, head of the £37,860-a-year Whitgift School in south London, said that Russell Group institutions are increasingly giving places to 18-year-olds regardless of whether they meet their offers or not. Mr Ramsey, who chairs the universities committee at the Headmasters' and Headmistress' Conference (HMC), said that there is growing concern among schools about the practise. "The biggest gap at my schools was five grades down  from the offer admitted," he told headteachers at the an...
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EMWPREP NEWS – May 2018 // Issue 7

    EMWPREP News Team Team Update Congratulations on surviving GDPR month! Unless you've been living under a rock, you will have noticed that the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into force last Friday. As well as flooding our inboxes with emails and giving rise to some really great memes and tweets, the GDPR is a regulation in EU law that has a big effect on the way EMWPREP and our team operates. Recently, we provided our partners with the ...
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EMWPREP NEWS – March 2018 // Issue 6

EMWPREP News Team Team Update Very much like the British landscape, EMWPREP has been snowed under with work over the last two months. At the start of March partners received their interim reports, which provided a useful insight into how they have met their outreach targets at this point in the year. Please note that the deadline for additional analysis or alterations is Friday 30th March. Recently, Eliot Hudson-Jones and Emma Church were invited to HEFCE's London offices to...
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Tuition fee value for money: ‘I feel ripped off’

"I feel ripped off. They do the bare minimum and I honestly don't see where my money is going." "I am in nearly £40,000 worth of debt and often wonder why I went to uni." These students, asked by the new Office for Students if university tuition fees represent good value, are among a significant majority - 62% - who say they don't think it's worth it. The OfS finds only 38% of students in England think the tuition fees for their course are good value for money. Course subject is a majo...
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‘Wasted potential’ of mature students

A university group says that the government's review of tuition fees in England should make a priority of finding ways to attract more mature and part-time students. The Million Plus group says there is a "huge pool of untapped potential" among adults who missed out on university. After fees increased in 2012, mature student numbers fell by 20%. Les Ebdon, head of the university access watchdog, backed calls to reverse this "very worrying trend". Mature students - counted as people sta...
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Review shows that OFFA’s approach to evidence has driven change in access

The Office for Fair Access’s approach to research and evidence has been successful in helping universities and colleges to improve higher education access and participation by working in more effective ways, an impact review published today has found. The review, conducted by the consultancy Nursaw Associates as OFFA prepares to close at the end of this month, investigated how far OFFA’s Evidence and Effective Practice activities have met its objective to ‘support and challenge the sector to co...
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Geography should not determine social mobility

Parental occupation, family income, early years education, “social capital” (ie who you know)… these are the sorts of things we traditionally look at when considering what shapes a child’s ability to do well at school and beyond. Yet, these days, there’s a new and growing influence on the life chances of children across the country: geography. Last year, two reports published by the Social Market Foundation think tank laid out the painful truth. Where someone lives can determine their s...
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Degrees courses to be rated gold, silver and bronze

Degree courses are to be rated for quality, subject by subject, under a new pilot scheme which ministers say leaves universities "no place to hide". Individual subjects at different universities will be graded gold, silver or bronze by a new tool feeding in official data on teaching quality. But students will not be able to use the rankings to choose their courses until 2020, when the tool goes live. Universities say the assessment of subjects must be effective. The new system to rate tea...
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Forgotten, isolated and ignored: the rise of the commuter student

Universities are failing to meet the needs of commuter students across the UK even though the number of students choosing to live at home is increasing. A study conducted by social mobility charity the Sutton Trust in February 2018 highlighted that about 55.8 per cent of students under the age of 20 attend a university less than 57 miles from home, while only one in 10 students attends a university more than 150 miles away. The report further highlighted that in 2014-15 (the first year of £9,0...
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University drop-out rates in UK rise for third successive year

Drop-out rates among university students who give up their studies within 12 months have gone up for the third year in a row, according to official statistics. Figures released by the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) show that 26,000 students in England who began studying for their first degree in 2015 did not make it beyond the first year. Rates vary widely across the higher education sector, with almost one in five undergraduates quitting by the end of their first year at the worst ...
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