The Independent

Less than half of tuition fees income spent on teaching

- ELEANOR BUSBY EDUCATION CORRESPOND­ENT

Less than half of tuition fee income at universiti­es is spent on teaching, a report suggests, and the majority of students want to know more about where their money ends up. Few students want their fees spent on management staff, student recruitmen­t, marketing, or community work, research from the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) has found.

Almost three in four (74 per cent) of students would like more informatio­n on how their tuition fees – which are up to £9,250 a year – are spent, findings from the think tank show. Among institutio­ns that

provide a breakdown, about 45 per cent of tuition fee income is spent on the direct costs of teaching, the analysis suggests.

Much of the rest of the income goes on other academic uses, such as maintainin­g teaching buildings, IT and library facilities. And fees are also spent on student welfare and widening participat­ion. However, about a fifth of the income is spent on things that students are less keen on, according to HEPI.

“[Students] have a strong preference for teaching-related spending and are sceptical of things that are important to institutio­ns but which appear less directly beneficial to students, such as marketing and spending on community engagement,” the paper says.

The report shows that one university spends a total of £740 of each student’s annual fees on finance, marketing, HR, policy and planning, alumni and the vice-chancellor’s salary. However, the paper concludes: “It is clear there is some distance left to travel before all students have access to clear and comparable informatio­n.”

The report calls on the government, regulators and institutio­ns to make changes to increase transparen­cy on the use of students’ tuition fees – and it suggests renaming “tuition fees” as “student fees” to reflect better how the money is spent. The analysis is published just weeks after reports have suggested that tuition fees in England’s universiti­es could be cut to £6,500 a year as part of the government’s review of post-18 education.

Nick Hillman, the director of HEPI and a co-author of the report, said: “Tuition fees were introduced 20 years ago and they have been tripled twice. Ministers and regulators have repeatedly demanded informatio­n on where the fees go. Yet there is still little informatio­n available and three-quarters of students want to know more.”

He added: “The arguments for telling students what they want to know are overwhelmi­ng. Where this has already occurred, it has tended to show less than half of the fees go on the direct costs of teaching but most of the rest does go on student-facing activities. Any reduction in the headline fee cap is therefore likely to hit students hard – unless every penny were permanentl­y replaced by other funding, which history suggests is exceedingl­y unlikely.”

Jim Dickinson, a co-author of the report, said: “Students and their unions have been clamouring for informatio­n about where their fees go for years – yet despite nudges from government and sector bodies, research suggests that little progress has been made. Fears that increased transparen­cy will lead to dissatisfa­ction are unfounded – and regardless of the balance between the state and student in funding higher education, students want and deserve to know where the money goes.”

Shakira Martin, president of the National Union of Students, said: “When students are paying such a high price to access higher education, it’s no wonder that many are demanding a greater transparen­cy to how money is spent. There clearly needs to be much more accountabi­lity built into the system – to that end, providers publishing a breakdown of where fees go would be a good place to start. There must also be a greater student involvemen­t in the decision-making process where money is to be invested.”

Alistair Jarvis, chief executive of Universiti­es UK, said: “While progress has been made by universiti­es to better explain the costs of a university experience there remains a need for more accessible informatio­n to improve public understand­ing. Universiti­es UK is currently working with universiti­es to develop guidance and to promote good practice on explaining the value students get for their money, and how fee income is spent. We will be publishing this guidance in the near future."

 ??  ?? Students pay up to £9,250 a year for their university education (Getty)
Students pay up to £9,250 a year for their university education (Getty)

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