Yorkshire Post

Minister calls for more social mobility at university level

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UNIVERSITI­ES MUST do more to raise standards in schools to ensure students from all background­s ‘get to the finish line’ of a degree that leads to a graduate job, a Minister has said.

Universiti­es Minister Michelle Donelan said it is “far too simplistic” to only look at the number of students from a disadvanta­ged group going into higher education to measure progress.

Students from black ethnic groups are more likely to go to university than their white peers, but they are less likely to complete their course, obtain top degrees, or secure a graduate job, Ms Donelan said.

Speaking to the Festival of Higher Education, the Minister called on universiti­es to sponsor schools and run summer camps to ensure students succeed when they arrive at university.

She told the virtual event: “It is far too simplistic to just look at the numbers of a group going to university. True social mobility is not getting them to the door, it is getting them to the finish line

with a high-quality course that will lead them to a graduate job.

“This is why I want to see universiti­es doing even more to raise standards and aspiration in schools.

“Universiti­es have the potential here to make a tremendous difference in opening up opportunit­ies. And, while I’m thrilled by the number who are already doing so, I’d like even more hightariff universiti­es to be coming forward to open maths schools.”

Ms Donelan also called for controvers­ial ‘conditiona­l unconditio­nal’ university offers to end to ensure students do not make decisions that are not in their best interests.

Her comments come after the Office for Students announced this month that the offers – which give students a place on a degree course, regardless of their A-level grades, on the condition that they make the university their firm first choice – will be banned until September 2021.

Ms Donelan said: “The registrati­on condition is of course only temporary, but I want to see the practice ending for good.

“Because I don’t want to see students making decisions that are not in their best interests.

“Quite frankly, there is no justificat­ion for such practices.”

The Minister said university is not the only path for learners, adding that for some further education will support their goals, or an apprentice­ship will ‘catapult’ their ambitions.

 ??  ?? MICHELLE DONELAN: ‘Universiti­es have the potential to make a tremendous difference.’
MICHELLE DONELAN: ‘Universiti­es have the potential to make a tremendous difference.’

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