The Westminster government will publish long-awaited policy plans forEnglish higher education this week, including minimum entry requirements tostudy atuniversity and student number controls, and purportedly the biggest increase inteaching funding “inover adecade”.
The government will publish its response to the Augar review ofpost-18 education, which reported inMay 2019, on 24February, launching aconsultation on aseries ofplanned changes aimed atcracking down onwhat ministers deem “lowvalue” courses atsome universities.
As expected, the proposals will include plans for minimum entry requirements, under which students would have to obtain GCSE English and maths at grade4 (a“standard pass”) to be eligible for student loan funding to study at a higher education institution, TheDaily Telegraph .
There would also be an alternative proposal to set the minimum entry requirement at EEgrades at Alevel and equivalent qualifications, the Telegraph.
ߣߣƵ
The Department for Education billed ministers as offering a “pledge to invest in lifelong flexible learning with a renewed focus on ensuring better graduate outcomes”.
The DfE said: “Plans are expected to be laid out to introduce a lifelong loan entitlement (LLE) worth the equivalent of four years of post-18 education to support students to study, train, retrain or upskill throughout their lives through flexible courses.” The LLE plan is already under way in legislation introduced to Parliament, although key details on aspects including eligibility are yet to be announced, and the DfE’s wording might indicate that there will be a consultation launched this week on the LLE.
ߣߣƵ
The department also said: “The government will seek views on how to ensure young people are encouraged to pursue the right path for them and receive a fair deal for their investment if they choose to go to university. This includes considering the introduction of minimum eligibility requirements, to ensure students aren’t being pushed into higher education before they are ready, and student number controls, so that poor-quality, low-cost courses aren’t incentivised to grow uncontrollably.”
The mention of student number controls in relation to “low-cost” courses might seem to indicate that the planned controls are a response to the LLE – as full degrees are currently uniformly priced at the £9,250 annual tuition fee cap.
The department added that the announcement by education secretary Nadhim Zahawi and higher and further education minister Michelle Donelan was “expected to confirm nearly £900million of new investment in higher education, including an additional £750million, which will be invested in high-quality teaching and facilities, including in science and engineering, subjects that support the NHS and degree apprenticeships. This includes the largest increase in government funding for the HE sector to support students and teaching inover adecade.”
The DfE could not immediately clarify whether this funding, or elements of it, had previously been announced.
ߣߣƵ
This funding “will also establish a new national scholarship scheme to improve access for high-achieving disadvantaged students to either higher or further education or to an apprenticeship”, the department said. “The higher education consultation is expected to include considerations for options for the design and eligibility of these scholarships, such as whether to target students by reference to a range of criteria, such as household income and achieving certain grades atAlevel.”
ߣߣƵ, the first to report that the government was considering using GCSE grades to set a minimum entry bar, in March 2021, was previously told that there was debate in government over whether to set the bar using GCSE grade4 or5, the latter being a“strong pass”.
If the government does opt for a grade4 bar, that may be judged as having relatively little impact for the sector as a whole. There was previously afigure said tobe incirculation in government of 4,000 for the number of students currently at higher education institutions without grade4 atGCSE English and maths, THEhas reported.
On student number controls, abolished in England in 2015, the Telegraph said it was “likely that ‘low quality’ will be defined as those with a high number ofstudents dropping out and alow proportion getting a graduate job or entering further study once they have completed their degrees”.
ߣߣƵ
A DfE spokesman said: “Our universities are a great British success story. They are powerhouses of innovation and are playing a key part in revolutionising the skills system, helping making lifelong learning possible with more flexibility and technical training.
“But we need to ensure that we are creating opportunities that will not only open doors but will develop the talent our country needs to prosper now and in the future.
ߣߣƵ
“Higher education is an investment, and we need to ensure that graduates are being rewarded for the money, time and effort they put into their studies with an educational experience and jobs that match their skills and help contribute to the economy”.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to ձᷡ’s university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








