Open letter to applicants from UCAS and Universities UK
Friday, 20 March 2020 20:46
Letter which issued today to applicants following the update from
government of further details on arrangements for students whose
exams have been cancelled. This is a joint letter from Universities
UK and UCAS. This includes a statement from the Universities
Minister. Dear [applicant] Following the recent Government
announcements, we want to reassure you that all organisations
involved in...Request free trial
Dear [applicant]
Following the recent Government announcements, we
want to reassure you that all organisations involved in
the higher education admissions process are working flat
out to find a solution that’s efficient, fair and in your
best interests. We appreciate this is a difficult and
uncertain situation for applicants planning to start
university in the autumn and we are committed to work
together to ensure that your hard work to date will not
go to waste and that no-one is unfairly impacted in this
process by the Covid-19 virus.
Here’s what we know:
The UK Government has asked Ofqual (the examinations
regulator) to develop a process in England that will
provide you a calculated grade for A levels.
To make sure it’s a fair reflection of your performance¸
the Government has said your grade will be based on
information from your teachers’ judgement using:
-
previous attainment, including GCSEs and
mocks
-
non-exam assessment (course work)
-
the grade your teachers believe you would have
been awarded should exams have gone ahead
Separate information has been published
for Wales and Scotland.
When will you get these grades?
The Government has said its aim is provide these
calculated grades before the end of July and there will
be an option to sit an exam later if you do not feel your
grades reflect your performance. The Government has said
this will happen at the earliest reasonable
opportunity.
What does that mean for your UCAS
application?
We are working with universities and colleges to be
flexible in offer making decisions and they are committed
to doing all they can to support you in these
unprecedented times.
It’s important to remember that places are not decided on
grades alone. Information in your personal statement and
reference are part of the decision-making process along
with your interview, portfolio, audition and any other
information that’s relevant to your potential to succeed
on an undergraduate course.
We expect once grades are available in July, universities
and colleges will make decision on students with
conditional offers and UCAS will support you through our
Confirmation and Clearing process, should you need
it.
Our advice to students who have received an unconditional
offer is always to think first about whether this is the
right institution and course for you before you make any
decision.
At UCAS we will continue to support you through the
application process and will continue to keep you up to
date as more announcements are made.
A message from the Universities Minister,
“We want to assure students that grades will be equally
as valid as those in previous years, and their hard work
will be rewarded and fairly recognised. There is no
reason for the usual admissions cycle to be
disrupted.
“I am pleased Universities UK has confirmed institutions
will be flexible and do all they can to support students
to progress to higher education.”
Take care
Clare Marchant, Chief Executive (UCAS) and Alistair
Jarvis, Chief Executive (Universities UK)
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