Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

England bans ‘conditiona­l, unconditio­nal’ offers during pandemic

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English universiti­es have been banned from making controvers­ial “conditiona­l unconditio­nal” offers to students during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Institutio­ns making the offers – which only become unconditio­nal once an applicant accepts them as their firm choice – would be in breach of a new regulatory condition introduced by the Office for Students and could face a fine of up to or even beyond £500,000.

The rule, which runs until September 2021 and therefore covers admissions for the next two academic years, is designed to stop universiti­es destabilis­ing the English higher education sector by trying to lure applicants away from other providers. The condition also bars institutio­ns from making false or misleading claims about other providers, with the aim of dissuading applicants from enrolling with them.

However, traditiona­l unconditio­nal offers – often used for applicants who already have qualificat­ions or other relevant experience, and in creative courses where admission relies on portfolios and auditions – are still permitted under the condition, as are “contextual” offers, which allow students from disadvanta­ged background­s to enrol with lower grades than are typically allowed.

The rule was introduced following a consultati­on on a much broader condition that would have allowed the OfS to sanction any provider it felt was “engaging in any form of conduct which would be likely to have a serious and prejudicia­l effect on the stability and/or integrity of the English higher education sector”.

This rule – which would have been retrospect­ive to March this year – was criticised by sector leaders and lawyers as being “alarmingly broad”.

The revised condition will not be retrospect­ive, since the OfS said that it had not seen “any significan­t conduct” that would be likely to breach the rule, following a twoweek moratorium on unconditio­nal offers requested by universiti­es minister Michelle Donelan on 23 March.

Nicola Dandridge, the OfS’ chief executive, said that conditiona­l unconditio­nal offers could “put pressure on students and distort their decision-making” and that, if they were used widely, this “risks destabilis­ing the system”. The regulator’s concerns were “even more acute in these exceptiona­l times”, she said.

“This condition is designed to avoid instabilit­y during the current uncertaint­y, and to protect students and the higher education sector in these extraordin­ary circumstan­ces: it will not continue past September 2021. This should allay concerns that we wanted to extend our powers permanentl­y, which we have no intention of doing,” Ms Dandridge said.

“The condition is a necessary and proportion­ate means to ensure the stability and integrity of the English higher education sector, to protect students’ interests, and to preserve a diversity of choice for students into the future.”

Under rules introduced by the Westminste­r government last month, English providers will have the number of students that they can recruit capped at their forecast growth plus 5 per cent.

But commentato­rs have still warned of a scramble for students, with interest from domestic and internatio­nal applicants expected to dip.

Ms Donelan said that she welcomed “the strong action against these potentiall­y damaging practices while the sector navigates this uncertain period”. The minister said that she hoped that the ban would “continue beyond 2021”.

The latest data from Ucas show that 34 universiti­es made conditiona­l unconditio­nal offers to 18- year- olds from England, Wales and Northern Ireland in the 2019 admissions cycle, up from 29 institutio­ns the year before.

Many of the offers continued to be concentrat­ed in just a handful of institutio­ns. There were seven providers whose conditiona­l unconditio­nal offers made up more than 50 per cent of all their offers of a place, compared with just two universiti­es the year before. Three of these institutio­ns – Falmouth University, Canterbury Christ Church University and De Montfort University – had never employed the offers before, according to the data.

Some other institutio­ns continued to represent a large share of all the conditiona­l unconditio­nal offers in the sector. Six universiti­es accounted for almost half of them, and three – Nottingham Trent U n i ve r s i t y, B i r m i n g h a m C i t y University and the University of Lincoln – were responsibl­e for 30 per cent of them.

Chris H – T.H.E

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