The Mail on Sunday

Universiti­es in drive to recruit new ‘minority’ . males!

- Biy JultieHeen­ry

UNIVERSITI­ES are setting tar- gets to recruit more white male students after numbers fell so low that they were classed as a minority group.

Aston and Essex universiti­es have pledged to boost numbers in their latest ‘ access plans’ submitted to t he Office for Students (OfS), the higher education regulator.

Aston says it will focus its energies during 2019 / 20 on white males, black British students and women studying engineerin­g and science-related subjects.

Essex wants to increase the number of white men joining it and other local universiti­es by two per cent.

Several universiti­es, including Oxford, have previously launched campaigns to increase the intake of white, working-class men, but Aston and Essex are the first mainstream institutio­ns to include white men in strategies to boost under-represente­d groups.

According to the Higher Education Statistics Agency data, white British students are in a minority at about ten per cent of institutio­ns. And on some courses, such as business, pharmacy and science-related degrees, more than 70 per cent of students are from ethnic minorities. In 2016 / 17, 27 per cent of the UK undergradu­ate intake were white males, down from 30 per cent in 2007 / 08. At Aston, almost two-thirds of the current intake are non-white.

Official figures also show that 123 out of 149 higher education institutio­ns have more female than male students and the gender gap is growing.

Female students are a third more likely to apply to degree courses than their male peers.

While university entry should primarily be decided on merit, Professor Alan Smithers, director of the Centre for Education and Employment Research at Buckingham University, said there was a good case for giving white men special attention. ‘It is a form of racism to be uncomforta­ble in tackling white male under-representa­tion,’ he said.

Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI), which has published a study on the educationa­l underachie­vement of young men, said: ‘When putting together our report, we were shocked to find so few higher education institutio­ns had these sorts of targets. The problem is so evident and we’ve continued to go backwards.

‘Some people oppose this whole agenda. We were told we were wrong to look at gender and should care only about class.

‘Tackling access to university needs a focus on gender, disadvanta­ge and ethnicity, and it is possible to care about all three of these things simultaneo­usly.’

The HEPI report called for a ‘ Take Our Sons to University Day’ and also for more foundation year courses, which prepare students for degree-level study, to help to encourage young men to seek university places.

Others have suggested boosting the number of degree apprentice­ships, which allow youngsters to earn as they learn.

Research has found some university staff feel uncomforta­ble offering programmes aimed specifical­ly at white boys in case it is viewed as racist or leads to other groups being overlooked.

‘ We found that people were quite uncomforta­ble with the idea of running a targeted activity with this group, in a way that we’ve not encountere­d, for example, targeting young black African men,’ said one study from King’s College London.

‘We had quite a lot of people saying, “This isn’t going to be a white-only event, is it?” ’

‘The problem is clear but we’re going backwards’

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