British universities offering free tutoring for disadvantaged school children

Universities across the UK are offering free tutoring for disadvantaged school children in order to improve diversity in higher education. 35 higher education institutions, including Leeds, Birmingham, Worcester and Hertfordshire universities, are using part their budget from widening participation to pay online tuition for GCSE and A-level students. Some A-level students will have received offers from universities already, and the extra tuition helps to ensure they make the grades. Universities...
More

Engaging and retaining students through video capture

The last 10 years have seen a growing emphasis on widening participation and access to higher education across the world. Yet there are so many significant changes taking place, affecting everything from international student mobility to recruitment trends to regional and global graduate employability that it is hard to predict with much accuracy what the future of higher education holds or to be sure that your institution is primed to be responsive. In the midst of all this confusion, universit...
More

Tackling the geographical disparities in higher education

It’s no secret that, in higher education, where you come from has a major impact on where you end up. There are wide gaps in access depending on which part of the country you come from, with young people from some areas still over twice as likely to enter higher education as those from the lowest participation neighbourhoods, and more than five times as likely to enter the universities with the highest entry requirements. Read More.
More

Students can now see new average earnings data on Unistats

From today, students can see data on the average earnings by subject for each higher education provider on the Unistats website. This is the first time detailed subject level data has been made available publicly. This means that we are showing data for French specifically, for example, rather than grouping together earnings for all language subjects. Read More.
More

‘I worry about life choices based on a set of exams taken at 16’

Colleges take chances on young people and adults every day to offer them opportunities to progress, writes Kirsti Lord. I was recently at an event for colleagues at universities working to widen access to higher education. It was inspiring to see hundreds of people committed to engaging those least likely to apply for university, coming together to share case studies, best practice and research on how to increase the number of first-generation scholars. Read More.
More

Keeping it local: why widening participation is a community issue

IntoUniversity started in a West London community that people across the world now know all too well for the worst of reasons: the Lancaster West Estate, home to Grenfell Tower. There can be few local communities in history that have been subject to so much national attention, or so many questions about the relationship between place, poverty and social mobility. Fifteen years before the fire, we launched IntoUniversity in response to the alarming number of young people from Lancaster West who w...
More

Universities minister issues ‘bums on seats’ warning over cheap degree courses

Universities must not put “bums on seats” ahead of providing high-quality degrees that offer students value for money and good earning potential, the Universities Minister has said. In a stark warning, Sam Gyimah said institutions need to take responsibility and “police themselves” to ensure they are not offering “threadbare” and “cheap” courses. He argued that there is variability between courses and institutions in potential future income that is a cause for concern. Read More.
More

OfS funded local networks inspire young people to enter higher education- Year 1 Report

The Office for Students (OfS) has today published a report on the first year of the National Collaborative Outreach Programme (NCOP). The report showcases how 29 consortia - funded by the OfS - are working collaboratively with local schools, colleges, universities and businesses to creatively develop outreach opportunities for young people in specific areas where higher education participation has been identified as lower than expected given the GCSE results of the young people living there. Cli...
More

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 ...
More