The Sunday Telegraph

Universiti­es may start in January under Truss

Shake-up of term times possible in education overhaul if Foreign Secretary becomes PM

- By Will Hazell POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

THE start of the university year could be moved from September to January under Liz Truss’s planned shake-up of the education system, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose.

Last week, Ms Truss unveiled a policy for all students receiving straight A*s in their A-levels to be automatica­lly invited to an interview at Oxford or

Cambridge. In order to deliver the pledge, the Truss campaign has said it would reform admissions so that students apply following the grading of their A-level exam results.

The system – known as post-qualificat­ion admissions (PQA) – would be a radical overhaul of current arrangemen­ts, where universiti­es make offers on the basis of predicted grades.

The Telegraph understand­s that if Ms Truss becomes prime minister, proposals for the system will be drafted in the first 12 months, with a campaign source confirming that major changes to the academic year would be considered.

Meanwhile, a senior source in admissions said: “The open question PQA raises is about the academic year.”

Implementi­ng Ms Truss’s idea would require squeezing interviews into the end of summer – which would create a “very pressured situation” – or undertakin­g a fundamenta­l redesign of the calendar, they said. “Either exams have to be earlier, at which point you’re actually reducing the amount of learning time in A-level, or the academic year has to shift to January.”

However, they said the latter option would pose the problem of England being “totally out of kilter with Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland” and “out of kilter internatio­nally”, which could adversely affect recruitmen­t of foreign students.

The system would take several years to introduce, they added. “The problem Liz has is that while this policy might be eye-catching, practicall­y it couldn’t really be implemente­d before the next election.”

The Department for Education considered admissions reform when Gavin Williamson was education secretary, although it was understood to be leaning towards a less radical option whereby students would apply at the normal time but only receive offers when they had their grades.

However, the plan was ditched when Nadhim Zahawi replaced Mr Williamson as education secretary.

A source familiar with discussion­s at the time said PQA was the sort of policy the Civil Service “try to kill” because it would be “a lot of work” with an uncertain return. “Gavin Williamson really wanted it. When Nadhim came, they basically said ‘it’s all this work and it’s not your plan’,” the source said.

The next education secretary would have to confront the fact that the reform would involve a “lot of time and effort and political capital” at a time when they are likely to be facing challenges in the schools system such as a potential teacher strike over pay.

Ms Truss’s idea for automatic interviews for Oxbridge would also run into opposition from other universiti­es in the elite Russell Group, the source added.

“The rest of the Russell Group will go mental,” they said. “Oxbridge already get the pick of the crop.”

‘While this policy might be eye-catching, practicall­y it couldn’t really be implemente­d before the next election’

‘The rest of the Russell Group will go mental. Oxbridge already get the pick of the crop’

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