Unconditional University Offers 4.00 pm Matt Warman (Boston
and Skegness) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered unconditional university offers. It is an honour
to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Moon, for what I hope will be
a debate that is both pithy and genuinely important....Request free trial
Unconditional University Offers
4.00 pm
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(Boston and Skegness)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered unconditional university
offers.
It is an honour to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Moon,
for what I hope will be a debate that is both pithy and
genuinely important.
I remember being at school when I first heard about
unconditional offers. I thought that perhaps some Oxbridge
college, then the usual issuer of such things, would be so
obviously struck by my talents that an unconditional offer
would be a possibility. The prospect of an unconditional
offer gave me hope of relief from the pressures of the
exams that dominated my life then and that sometimes
dominate young people’s lives now. So I hope that hon.
Members will not interpret this speech as an attack on
unconditional offers per se.
By the way, I pause briefly to add that in so far as
Oxbridge was struck by my obvious talents, it was only to
suggest that I attend a different university, but perhaps
taking my teenage self down a peg or two was the best thing
that Oxbridge could have done.
Back then in 1999, and indeed up until last year, the
typical student who was made an unconditional offer was
still predicted three As—by the way, I was not predicted
three As—although Oxbridge had abolished unconditional
offers earlier. UCAS has reported that 3,000 unconditional
offers were made in 2013, and that in 2017 the figure was
50,000. The Department for Education and the Select
Committee on Education are therefore right to look at the
overall picture, which has seen a quintupling of such
applications, according to UCAS, from less than 1% of all
offers in the past to more than 5% today. In my own
constituency nearly 30% of all applicants received at least
one unconditional offer, and those applicants were
predicted grades ranging from BBC up to ABB.
This growth in unconditional offers comes not from
universities that dominate the top of the league tables but
from elsewhere; nor does it come in the subjects for which
university entrance is the most hotly contested. Less than
0.1% of all medicine and dentistry students received
unconditional offers, compared with nearly 10% of all mass
communications and documentations degrees. As a former
journalist myself, I would not dare to demean a media
studies degree, but given that at one time there were more
people studying the media at university than there were
actually working in all of it, it is right to ask why
universities are seeking to fill their courses in this new
way, and whether it is for financial reasons.
-
(Strangford) (DUP)
First, I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on bringing this
matter forward for debate; I spoke to him before the
debate, telling him that I would seek to make an
intervention. Does he agree that the fact that over 15
times more unconditional offers as in the past have been
made to university students in the UK indicates a mindset
among universities of focusing on ensuring that they reach
their capacity of “bums on seats” rather than on a
student’s ability to take a course? Does he agree that some
children will go with a course that is less suited to them
than other courses as they will know it is in the bag, as
it were, and that they will therefore miss out on courses
that could have been better for them as an individual?
-
I agree absolutely with the hon. Gentleman. Indeed, that
contrasts sharply with what Universities UK has said in
response to the Education Committee:
“Unconditional offers account for a very small proportion
of all offers made by universities. It is simply not in the
interests of universities to take students without the
potential to succeed at university.”
There has clearly been a huge growth in the number of
unconditional offers, for some of the reasons that the hon.
Gentleman has just mentioned.
Schools have expressed concerns about students across the
spectrum of abilities not performing to their full
potential in exams, because they are safe in the knowledge
that they have already secured a place at university
regardless of their grades. Although that can be a welcome
safety net for some students, we must balance it with the
impacts that it can have on schools and how it affects
their exam results overall, for which they are held
accountable and against which, of course, they have their
own performance measured. This is not a new problem but it
has now spread far more widely, as I said earlier.
In my constituency, anecdotal evidence has been cited of
students giving up college courses after receiving an
unconditional offer, which of course may result in their
struggling at university if they have missed fundamental
information that they would otherwise have been taught. If
we let this development go unchecked, we are letting our
young people down at a time when we should be supporting
them in preparing for their next step in education. Of
course all universities should be able to make
unconditional offers, but in doing so they should surely
exercise a duty of care to the interests of the prospective
student at the same time.
I look forward to hearing the Minister’s views in a moment
on what is a complex matter. Some universities, for
instance, have reportedly been inducing students to come to
them by giving unconditional offers, so long as they are
ranked as the student’s first choice. In the competitive
landscape that a large number of universities find
themselves in, such a tactic could be seen as potentially
damaging to students, when other incentives would more
typically involve vouchers or computers.
The risk is that a student might end up with a degree from
one university when they might have got into another
university that is ranked more highly, and that they might
end up with worse results in their school exams because
they did not need good grades to get to university. It is a
vicious circle if things go wrong, and it applies to all
subjects rather than simply being about the promotion of
the most academic subjects.
I will give an example from my constituency. Already this
year, 23 students at Boston Grammar School have received an
unconditional offer from at least one university. That is
more than a third of the students from the school who have
applied to universities for admission through UCAS. If
there is a demotivational effect, there is a risk that it
will reflect badly both on the school and on the students
themselves in later life.
The headmaster of Boston Grammar School, John McHenry, who
has helped me to put together this speech, tells me that
the school has even seen comments suggesting that
universities would “appreciate” it if students completed
their studies. He says:
“In other words, it actually won’t make any difference at
all if they don’t finish their A-level courses. It’s very
difficult to understand how it is possible for universities
to permit students onto degree courses without passing
examinations, when schools themselves have strict admission
criteria relating to A-level courses. How would a ‘free for
all’ at A level impact on GCSE results nationally?”
If people drop out of school courses prior to university,
or prior to doing anything else, it will compromise both
their ability to complete a degree and their CV for the
rest of their life. This is a serious issue.
The risks of having the wrong unconditional offers system
are obvious: universities struggle to attract the best
students for a course, which can lead to those with lower
exam results being accepted, but those students then end up
struggling further, which in turn holds those children back
when they become adults. It compromises the long-term
quality of that university course, and schools, too, are
punished for declining results. The ramifications of
getting this matter wrong are extensive.
Universities are rightly independent of Government, but
they are also regulated and subsidised by taxpayers. In
this area, as in others, a totally free market may not
serve the wider interest. As The Times Educational
Supplement has highlighted, some universities have explored
making so-called “contextual offers”, whereby lower grades
are required of members of certain demographics. Although
that seems like part of the solution, that sort of positive
discrimination should very much be handled with care.
Likewise, courses such as music and art may rightly rely on
a portfolio of work rather than purely relying on A-level
grades. However, those two things do not explain the
situation that we are in.
This debate is ultimately about pupils; it is not about
universities or schools, but about the pupils who are going
through the system potentially damaging their CVs and job
prospects for the rest of their lives. I end by quoting
Malcolm Trobe, deputy general secretary of
the Association of School and College
Leaders:
“Universities need to understand that making unconditional
offers to students on the basis of predicted grades is not
in the best interests of these young people. It can lead to
students being less focused on their A-levels because they
feel their university place is in the bag. They then attain
a lower grade than they are capable of achieving and this
can later become a significant problem for them if a
prospective future employer takes A-level grades into
account in their selection process. We urge universities
not to make unconditional offers on the basis of predicted
grades, and advise students against choosing a course on
the basis of an unconditional offer and to ensure they find
the university and course that best suits them.”
Today I echo that call, and I hope that the Minister will
consider reviewing the effect of unconditional offers on
the overall education ecosystem.
4.10 pm
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(Chippenham)
(Con)
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Boston and
Skegness (Matt Warman) on securing the debate. I want to
talk briefly about the impact of unconditional offers in
restricting opportunities.
The first problem with unconditional offers is that they
tend to come with conditions, mainly that students must
place that university as their first choice. In 2017, less
than one fifth of unconditional offers were down as
insurance offers. Students are therefore often encouraged
to pick a lower-performing university or a course that is
not ideal for them. In other words, they hedge their bets.
We are inadvertently encouraging them to underestimate
themselves, yet universities are supposed to open doors,
not close them. In the past, unconditional offers were
often made on the basis that students were perfect matches
or star pupils, but that is not the case anymore. UCAS
found that predicted grades of BBB were more likely to get
unconditional offers than straight As. With an increase in
fees, we have seen an increase in unconditional offers.
Some 50,000 students last year were made an unconditional
offer. That is an increase of 1,629% since 2013.
A second way that unconditional offers can restrict
opportunities is through the knock-on effect they can have
on A-level results, as we have heard. Unconditional offers
encourage students to take their foot off the gas, which
can have an important long-term ramifications because those
A-level results stay on students’ CVs for life. When I am
seeking to employ someone—I am sure colleagues do this—I
look at their A-level results and give them due diligence
and consideration. Some colleges have reported that up to
75% of students given unconditional offers have failed to
meet the expected grades. Again, that is not opening doors
but closing them.
I sit on the Education Committee, and in December the
chairman of Ofqual admitted that the situation is very
concerning. I agree with the head of UCAS, who said that we
need an “open and honest debate” about unconditional offers
and their impact. We need to halt the rising tide of
unconditional offers, which are closing doors and
opportunities for young people in Chippenham and across the
country.
4.13 pm
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The Minister for Universities, Science, Research and
Innovation (Mr Sam Gyimah)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Moon.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Boston and
Skegness (Matt Warman) on securing this important debate and
on the balanced and self-deprecating way in which he made his
speech. I welcome the opportunity to discuss the issues he
raised.
I, too, am deeply concerned by the recent large increases in
the number of unconditional offers received by students and
the potential impact that those offers can have, as my hon.
Friend the Member for Chippenham (Michelle Donelan) so
clearly outlined. For example, some students may coast in
their studies at school or college or perhaps not even
complete their course. Another possibility is that students
might accept the obvious attractions of an unconditional
offer at one institution, rather than a conditional offer at
an institution that would better suit their ability level. I
want to be clear that higher education providers should not
make unconditional offers to students who lack the talent and
potential to complete a higher education qualification,
especially when those students may benefit from exploring
different education options or becoming employed on finishing
their A-level qualifications.
It is right that higher education institutions should be able
to make unconditional offers when it is appropriate, but I
agree with Members that that should be done with extreme
care. I therefore welcome this opportunity to highlight the
sharp rise in the number of unconditional offers made in
recent years and why it is right for the House to be
concerned. Data from UCAS for last year shows that the number
of unconditional offers to 18-year-olds increased to more
than 50,000 from fewer than 3,000 in 2013—a seventeenfold
increase. Last year, 17.5% of 18-year-old applicants received
at least one unconditional offer. While the overall
proportion of such offers remains relatively low, at some
providers unconditional offers account for more than 20% of
all offers made. The House is right to be concerned.
Universities rightly have autonomy over their admissions. The
principle of institutional autonomy has been recognised as
central to our higher education system for many years. In
fact, the Higher Education and Research Act 2017 goes
considerably further than previous legislation in recognising
that principle. Institutions select their students, and it is
their responsibility to ensure that they only take students
who are appropriately qualified and able to succeed on the
course they are applying for. I expect institutions to assess
carefully the impact of unconditional offers on students,
ensuring that they really do get the right students for the
right courses. They should not allow students without the
potential to succeed to continue into a route that will not
benefit them.
There is considerable advice from UCAS for prospective
students on how to consider unconditional offers. UCAS
advises applicants to wait until they have received initial
decisions from all their university and college choices and
then to consider them carefully before accepting an
unconditional offer as their firm choice. It also emphasises
to students who accept unconditional offers the importance of
completing their qualifications to the best of their ability,
recognising that employers are likely to be interested in
their exam results as well as their degree classification.
Our reforms in the 2017 Act will help ensure that
institutions are accountable for ensuring that the students
they recruit can succeed. We have put in place a new
regulatory framework, and the teaching excellence and student
outcomes framework will include metrics on non-continuation.
The TEF will take into account student feedback, drop-out
rates and graduate outcomes to help prospective students make
the right choices and ensure that they get the value for
money they deserve from higher education. That will act as a
strong incentive for institutions to ensure that they recruit
sensibly and support all their students to succeed.
In addition, and in response to the concerns that many have
expressed about the impact of unconditional offers, the
Government have already asked the Office for Students to
monitor and review the number of unconditional offers made by
registered higher education providers. It is important that
the sector and the public have the evidence available to make
clear judgements about any impact such offers may have on
student access and outcomes in higher education. The Office
for Students intends to work with UCAS to analyse the data on
unconditional offers made during the last three years. They
will look at such factors as provider, location, subject and
student characteristics, including the grades with which they
ultimately entered higher education relative to their
predicted grades. That will enable initial conclusions to be
drawn on the scale and focus of unconditional offer making
and its impact on attainment prior to entry into higher
education. The OfS will produce a report on the first aspect
of the work this year.
The OfS will also analyse the relationship between
unconditional offer making and subsequent outcomes in
non-continuation, attainment, progression to postgraduate
study and employment. Where the OfS identifies a problem, I
expect it to take action in accordance with its powers set
out in legislation. The exact course of action will be for
the OfS to determine. I am clear that I do not intend to see
the life chances of young people adversely affected by a
desire to fill places at some institutions.
This is the right debate to have, and we are having it at the
right time. The OfS will comes into being on 1 April, so it
will be well placed to take the necessary action in the
interests of students, as my hon. Friend the Member for
Boston and Skegness said. We want the university system to
act in favour of students.
Question put and agreed to.
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