Education Secretary welcomes record proportion of university entrants from state schools
Thursday, 1 February 2018 12:30
Nine in 10 young entrants to full-time first degrees in 2016/17
went to state school, the highest level recorded, according to new
statistics out today (1 February). The statistics, published by the
Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA), measure how providers
are performing in boosting access to higher education from
disadvantaged groups. The key findings include: 90.0 per cent
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Nine in 10 young entrants to full-time first degrees in
2016/17 went to state school, the highest level recorded,
according to new statistics out today (1 February).
The statistics, published by the Higher Education
Statistics Agency (HESA), measure how providers are
performing in boosting access to higher education from
disadvantaged groups.
The key findings include:
- 90.0 per cent of young entrants (under 21) in 2016/17
came from state schools, the highest level recorded.
- 77.2 per cent of young entrants (under 21) to Russell
Group institutions in England were from state schools, up
from 72.9% in 2010/11.
- 11.4 per cent of young entrants (under 21) were from
low participation neighbourhoods (POLAR3), up from 10.0% in
2010/11.
Education Secretary welcomed the figures,
but highlighted that more needs to be done to boost
participation across the board. He said:
I am encouraged to see a record proportion of university
entrants now coming from state schools and disadvantaged
areas. Many universities are already doing brilliant work
to ensure more young people go on to higher education,
and I would encourage this best practice to be shared
across the sector.
Of course there is still more to do. That is why we have
introduced major reforms through the Higher Education and
Research Act, including the Transparency Duty which will
require all universities to publish data broken down by
gender, ethnicity and socio-economic background, shining
a light on institutions that need to do more to widen
access.
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