Scottish Daily Mail

SAVE THE OPEN UNIVERSITY

Top Tories call on ministers to reverse cuts crippling ‘ladder of opportunit­y’

- By Sarah Harris

MINISTERS are being urged to rethink the funding cuts crippling the Open University.

The institutio­n – which has provided a ‘ladder of opportunit­y’ for millions – is a victim of the changes to tuition fees.

It has been hit by a dramatic fall in part-time students, and education experts say ministers have to give it a subsidy so it can lower its fees.

Tory MP Robert Halfon said: ‘Far from cutting funds, we should be doing everything possible to support the OU financiall­y.’

Conservati­ve peer Lord Willetts, who as universiti­es minister introduced the 2012 tuition fee changes that have caused the crisis, admitted there was a ‘problem’.

He said ‘some level of public funding’ should return for mature students, such as those attending the OU. This issue should be a ‘priority’ for the Government’s current review of post-18 education and funding, he added.

The number of students enrolling with the OU has slumped from 242,000 in 2011/12 to 173,927 in 2016/17 – a fall of 28 per cent.

By some estimates, the OU has lost 600,000 students who might have been expected to start studying in that period if the funding had not changed. Most of the drop was in England, which is affected by the Government’s fee changes, while in Scotland tuition fees for a first degree are paid by the Scottish Government. The OU has traditiona­lly been the ‘University of the Second Chance’. Almost 80 per cent of OU students work full or part-time during their studies, and the institutio­n has helped more than two million people since it was founded in 1969.

But in 2012, the Coalition Government withdrew teaching grants to universiti­es across England and allowed fees to triple from £3,225 to £9,000 a year. It was believed this would encourage the take-up of higher education due to the creation of a ‘market’ in fees.

But it had the opposite effect on part-time students, who are often older and more likely to be deterred by debt.

Despite losing tens of millions of pounds of state funding, the OU said it tried to keep its fees ‘as low as possible for as long as possible’, but it has had to increase them significan­tly. An OU degree now typically costs students about £18,000 over six years, compared to more than £27,000 over three years at convention­al universiti­es.

Lord Willetts admitted that mature students were being put off by the fee and loans system that he oversaw as a minister.

Asked whether there should be a Government subsidy for the OU, he said: ‘Yes, we should bring back some level of public funding for mature students because whereas the fees and loans have worked for the people coming from schools straight into university, it’s not working so well for mature students and we need to promote more adult learning.’

Mr Halfon, chairman of the Commons education select committee, said the OU was ‘probably one of the most important education institutio­ns’ because it provided a ‘ladder of opportunit­y’ to millions’.

He added: ‘Far from cutting funds we should be doing everything possible to back [the OU] financiall­y and politicall­y.’

He said the OU should be regarded as an ‘elite’ university and receive ‘significan­t amounts of support from the Government because of the work that it does’.

Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute think-tank and former special adviser to Lord Willetts, said he thought the OU had ‘priced themselves higher than they needed’ in 2012 and should have charged ‘slightly lower’ tuition fees.

But he added: ‘The Open University has been hit very hard by the higher fees and it is time to look at introducin­g a direct subsidy for educating part-time students.’

A spokesman for the OU said it was consulting students and industry leaders about the proposals it will present to ministers. These could include calls for a return to a form of direct taxpayer subsidy.

The spokesman said: ‘Offering people an incentive to learn while they earn saves taxpayers money because skills bring economic benefits and help people transform their lives. Part-time higher education has been treated as a Cinderella service when it could hold the key to future prosperity.’

A spokesman for Westminste­r’s Department for Education said: ‘We already offer tuition fee loans for all types of students, including those who are part-time, but recognise the difficulti­es faced by some.

‘That’s why we are introducin­g maintenanc­e loans for part-time students equivalent to those available for full-time courses.’

The Open University’s council will today discuss a union’s vote of noconfiden­ce in its vice-chancellor.

Members of the University and College Union last week overwhelmi­ngly backed a motion which called on Peter Horrocks to resign. Mr Horrocks has angered OU staff by claiming academics ‘get away with not teaching’ and branding impending cuts ‘reprioriti­sing’.

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