Participation and policy in further and higher education Geoff Hayward (Oxford) Gareth Parry (Sheffield) Anna Vignoles (IoE)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Foundation degree students: learner identities and career aspirations Professor Sue Jackson Birkbeck Institute for Lifelong Learning
Advertisements

HEFCE Priorities John Rushforth Director. Overview Context Progression Retention Enhancement Funding.
AME Education Sector Profile
Tackling the issue of 17+ participation, attainment and progression: the role of study programmes Ann Hodgson and Ken Spours.
Fair access to Russell Group universities Dr Wendy Piatt Director General, The Russell Group 27 April
24 July 2014 PISA 2012 Financial Literacy results – New Zealand in an international context.
1. 2 What is the E 3 Alliance? A catalyst for change in Central Texas and in regions across the state Building a research-based regional blueprint to.
The Agenda Geoff Hayward Associate Director of SKOPE Nuffield Review.
Compact Termly Primary Headteacher Briefing November 2012 Headline Performance Data 2012.
Researching the furtherhigher complex Gareth Parry University of Sheffield.
VET in the Next Decade: Options and Opportunities Presentation to the 2010 CEET Conference Virginia Simmons A.O.
How is HE differentiated in the UK? Is this changing? David Raffe and Linda Croxford University of Edinburgh Changing Inequalities and Access to a Differentiated.
The 2012/13 reforms of part-time higher education funding in England Claire Callender Professor of Higher Education Birkbeck and Institute of Education.
What influences English and Mathematics attainment at age 11? Evidence from the EPPSE project.
What’s new in the Child Poverty Unit – Research and Measurement Team Research and Measurement Team Child Poverty Unit.
‘Unseen Children: access and achievement 20 years on’ (Ofsted, 2013) ‘Unseen Children: access and achievement 20 years on’ (Ofsted, 2013) The background.
The future of higher education Anna Vignoles Institute for Education.
G&T Narrowing the Gap Kevin Burrell: Operations Manager – Inclusion, Partnership and Innovation.
14 – 24 Learning and Skills Strategy (24) KCC / YPLA Strategy & Funding Briefing 14 – 24 Learning and Skills Strategy Delivering Bold Steps A new.
American Models and European Policies: the Career of the Short- Cycle Foundation Degree Gareth Parry University of Sheffield, UK.
Widening Participation in Higher Education: A Quantitative Analysis Institute of Education Institute for Fiscal Studies Centre for Economic Performance.
Changing transitions to a differentiated higher education system: Linda Croxford and David Raffe CES, University of Edinburgh
TDA perspective of HE in FE in Australia Association of Colleges (AoC) & Learning and Skills Improvement Service (LSIS) Seminar Pam Caven Director Policy.
AME Education Sector Profile
ANZAM WORKSHOP 2009 Peter Noonan. Framework for Review Terms of Reference Excluded innovation and research which was to be dealt with in Cutler Review.
Measuring and Promoting Progression Glyn Parry, Young People’s Education and Skills Linda Rose, Department for Education.
Further, Higher, Better? International perspectives on dual sector education A symposium Neil Garrod Gareth Parry Rolf Stumpf Skip Triplett.
How can we explain the high Muslim levels of poverty? Anthony Heath Centre for Social Investigation Nuffield College, Oxford.
Equity and Participation in Higher Education Comments from New Zealand Rob McIntosh Deputy Secretary Ministry of Education December 2008.
How fair is access to more prestigious UK universities? Vikki Boliver CRESJ seminar, University of York 12 th June 2012.
From traditional lectures to active learning: Persistent gender differences in large introductory biology classrooms Sara E. Brownell Assistant Professor.
Widening Participation in Higher Education: A Quantitative Analysis Institute of Education Institute for Fiscal Studies Centre for Economic Performance.
IFS When you are born matters: the impact of date of birth on child cognitive outcomes in England Claire Crawford, Lorraine Dearden & Costas Meghir Institute.
Policy Regimes and Organisational Contexts Gareth Parry David Smith.
CLOSING THE GAPS – REDUCING INEQUALITIES IN OUTCOMES FOR CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE BIRMINGHAM ACHIEVEMENT GROUP SEMINAR DECEMBER 2008 JOHN HILL RESEARCH.
THE SOUTH AFRICAN HIGHER EDUCATION LANDSCAPE
© Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2008 When you are born matters: the impact of date of birth on child cognitive outcomes in England Claire Crawford, Lorraine.
Effective Data Sharing Research Project Linking London; Newham Sixth form College.
Emy Onuora Aimhigher Greater Merseyside/ National BME HE Strategy Group BME Progression to HE – The need for a more strategic approach to widening participation.
WHITE WORKING CLASS ACHIEVEMENT Dean Jackson, Assistant Director, Education Hartlepool Borough Council.
Widening Participation in Higher Education: Analysis using Linked Admin Data Institute of Education Institute for Fiscal Studies Centre for Economic Performance.
Centre for Educational Sociology: themes from recent projects David Raffe Cathy Howieson
Student Success, Culture of Evidence: Adult Oregonians Without a High School Diploma.
Size, Shape and Widening Participation Gareth Parry University of Sheffield.
WIDENING PARTICIPATION IN A CHANGING FUNDING AND POLICY ARENA Dame Julia Goodfellow, Vice Chancellor University of Kent, and President of Universities.
Widening Participation - who, what, how and where? Linking London: a case study in practice 'Working in partnership to create opportunities'
Access to Higher Education in Wales: devolution, social democracy and equity Gareth Rees Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research, Data and Methods.
Further Education, Higher Education and the English Experiment Gareth Parry University of Sheffield.
James Cannon, Education Liaison and Outreach Manager | 4 th December 2014 What do you want to be when you grow up? An exploration of when and how school.
FE to HE PROGRESSION PROJECT Report to Welsh Government and HEFCW.
Patterns of HE participation in London March 4 th 2016 Gary Tindell Information Improvement Manager.
Ulster.ac.uk NI Skills Barometer Curriculum Development Symposium Gareth Hetherington 27 April 2016.
How middle attainers in education are being overlooked and squeezed by policy: a London focus Ann Hodgson and Ken Spours Centre for Post-14 Education.
Ethnicity trends – The University of Manchester Student Experience and Success Daniel Swain University of Manchester – Planning Support Office.
Professor Les Ebdon CBE Director of Fair Access to Higher Education.
Adult and tertiary education and poverty review Prof. Carlo Raffo, Dr. Diane Harris, Prof. Alan Dyson, Dr. Cate Goodlad, Dr. Steve Jones and Julian Skyrme.
Standards report Standards Report CT Board 18 th March 2016.
1 June 16, 2016 COMMUNITY COLLEGE RESEARCH CENTER June 16, 2016 CADE 2016 Nikki Edgecombe Senior Research Associate Jessica Brathwaite Postdoctoral Research.
Grammar Schools Evidence Pack #edforall. The Sutton Trust, 2015, Grammar Schools – Sutton Trust Fact Sheet Less than 3% of entrants to grammar schools.
The Attainment Gap and CSR
Taking Part 2008 Multivariate analysis December 2008
How do Ethnic Minority Graduates Fare in the Labour Market?
Gareth Parry University of Sheffield
Variation in access to and outcomes from higher education
Muslims, higher education, and the broken promise of social mobility
Scottish Education Post 16 Choices
The geography of higher education access and participation
Access, success and progression in the OfS
Policy assumptions and future scenarios
Policy assumptions and future scenarios
Presentation transcript:

Participation and policy in further and higher education Geoff Hayward (Oxford) Gareth Parry (Sheffield) Anna Vignoles (IoE)

The Research Projects & Teams Degrees of Success? The transition from VET to HE - Geoff Hayward, Hubert Ertl, Michael Hölscher, Harriet Dunbar-Godet Universal access and dual regimes of further and higher education - Gareth Parry, Anne-Marie Bathmaker, Greg Brooks, David Smith Widening participation in higher education: A quantitative analysis - Haroon Chowdry, Claire Crawford, Lorraine Dearden, Alissa Goodman, Anna Vignoles

Sector separation and the English experiment How do separate sectors of further and higher education impact on efforts to widen participation in undergraduate education?

Impact on: system Separate regimes for further and higher education have evolved despite the lack of a developed rationale Further and higher education are not regarded as parts of a common enterprise

Impact on: policy Policy development for further-higher education is uneven, unstable and led by the sector bodies for higher education Further education colleges have still to be widely accepted as normal and necessary locations for higher education

Impact on: identity The primary attachment of an institution is to a sector, and relationships with another sector differ in kind and intensity Further and higher education remain distinct brands and a dual-sector identity is less evident

Impact on: strategy Decisions to combine further and higher education are only partially informed by widening participation strategies Equity and skills agendas are not easily aligned, but require strong and strategic coordination

Impact: on progression The interfaces between further and higher education are configured in different ways and do not enhance internal progression An expansion of work-focused higher education will place new demands on access and transfer functions

Male HE participation, by deprivation quintile

Participation by deprivation status Very large raw differences in HE participation rates by deprivation status Controlling for individual characteristics approximately halves the gap Disparity all but disappears once we add in controls for prior attainment –1ppt for males –2.1ppts for females

Participation by ethnicity Most ethnic minority groups are more likely to participate in HE than White British students –Except Black Caribbean and Other Black students But these groups tend to go to worse schools and are more likely to be deprived –Gap turns positive when we include controls Including KS2 results also increases gap But declines once we add in KS3-5 results –Ethnic minority students improve performance more than White British students during secondary school

So far … Widening participation in HE to students from deprived backgrounds is largely about tackling low prior achievement Focusing policy interventions post compulsory schooling unlikely to eliminate raw socio-economic gap in HE participation –But does not absolve universities

Do alternative pathways widen participation? Qualifications held % General academic Vocational Foundation/Access Other No qualification TOTAL (more than 100%, as applicants can hold multiple qualifications)

Not quite the whole story Qualification pathways (in %) Academic Vocational FaA Other Ac + Voc Ac + FaA Other combination No qualification Total100

Vocational routes widen access Vocational routes open access to HE for non-traditional students. Applicants with a vocational background compared to those from the traditional general academic route are –From lower socio-economic classes –more often male –from a non-white ethnic background –more often disabled

But …

Type of Participation Also consider type of HE participation, because: –Students at less prestigious institutions more likely to drop out and/or achieve lower degree classification –Graduates from more prestigious institutions earn higher returns in the labour market Define “high status” university as: –Russell Group university (20 in total) –Any UK university with an average 2001 RAE score greater than lowest found amongst Russell Group Adds Bath, Durham, Lancaster, York, etc (21 in total)

Female “high status” participation, by deprivation quintile

“High status” participation by deprivation status Students from deprived backgrounds are less likely to attend a high status university than less deprived students –Although gap smaller than for participation Prior attainment is key to widening participation in “high status” institutions amongst more deprived students –Gap disappears amongst students with same Key Stage 4 results

“High status” participation by ethnicity Many ethnic minority participants are less likely to attend a “high status” institution than White British participants Once we add controls for prior attainment, all ethnic minority groups are at least as likely to attend a “high status” institution as White British students

And those from a vocational background? Using any of a variety of measures – UCAS tariff scores, RAE, QAA – and controlling for subjects VET students are more likely to participate in less prestigious universities with lower income per student But they tend to take subjects in technology areas and subjects allied to medicine where rates of return can be high Exception maybe Art & Design

What happens when VET students arrive? Multi-level modelling Vocational students on average are doing less well than students from academic background In institutions with high drop out rates VET students are at an increased risk In institutions with a high proportion of VET students VET students perform better