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HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Jonathan Mackay Audit Principal Staying the course: The retention of students in higher education.

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Presentation on theme: "HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Jonathan Mackay Audit Principal Staying the course: The retention of students in higher education."— Presentation transcript:

1 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Jonathan Mackay Audit Principal Staying the course: The retention of students in higher education

2 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Structure of the presentation About the NAO and the Public Accounts Committee About the study: methods, findings, conclusions How our recommendations and those of the Public Accounts Committee can be used to develop a strategy towards student retention

3 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY The NAO Provides independent information, assurance and advice to Parliament on the use of public resources Helps promote better financial management and value for money Headed by Comptroller and Auditor General

4 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY The accountability process Government requests and Parliament grant funds PAC session and report Government Response C&AG examines spending and reports to Parliament

5 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Why a study on retention? Follow up 2002 NAO and PAC reports PSA target: to bear down upon non- completion Financial/social returns to higher education Funding from HEFCE and spending by HEIs

6 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY The study involved Visits to 12 institutions Analysis of student data Interviews with early leavers Consultations with officials and other experts Comparisons with overseas higher education systems

7 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Our overall conclusion Compared internationally, higher education in England achieves high levels of student retention. For the sector to improve even marginally on that level of performance while, at the same time, opening up higher education to both increased numbers and greater diversity is a big challenge. The improvements so far are a good achievement.

8 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY We also noted: Marginal improvement in overall retention since previous report Increasing pressure as participation widens Still a wide range in HEIs performance, with retention decreasing in a minority of institutions Some groups of students more vulnerable to not continuing, e.g. part-time students

9 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Trends in retention, 1999-2005 Note: Full-time, first degree students only Source: HESA/HEFCE

10 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Continuation in individual institutions 2004-05 Note: Full-time, first degree students only, 2004-05 entry Source: NAO analysis of HESA student data

11 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY HEIs progress on retention Note: Full-time, first degree students only Source: NAO analysis of HESA student data

12 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Retention in different HEI groups Note: Full-time, first degree students only, 2004-05 entrySource: NAO analysis of HESA student data

13 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Retention strategy: which students are less likely to continue? Those with lower prior qualifications Those taking STEM or MFL subjects Men 20 years old on entry compared with 18 years Studying full time in a further education college (and registered at an HEI) Studying part-time in an HEI

14 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Retention strategy: Outcomes for part- time students Part time (1 st degree, 00-01) Full time (1 st degree, 02-03) Achieved HE qualification 47%77% Still studying9%8% Left without qualifying 44%15%

15 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Retention Strategy: Continuations for students with disabilities Note: All undergraduates, 2004-05 entry Source: NAO analysis of HESA student data

16 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Rec 1: Review trends in retention and use findings to improve the student experience and develop strategies for learning and teaching Rec 2: Underpin by monitoring retention at student faculty and course level Integrate monitoring of retention into annual review of all faculties and subjects Monitor cross-institution trends: parts of the institution, faculties, student groups Include teaching and learning experience and expertise in the assessment of issues and possible actions Review resources for students and teaching staff, e.g. guides to retention and the curriculum, advice to prospective students, guidance to staff on available resources PAC Rec: HEIs need to understand the needs of their changing student populations. They should use techniques to identify teaching and support services that appropriately reflect students different backgrounds

17 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Rec 3: Use early leaver surveys where particular retention problems are indicated to improve understanding and identify what might have been done Follow up on any issues from retention data and NSS, via qualitative research, focus groups and surveys Analyse student early departures and follow-up action Review how information collected can be used to develop strategies for the future PAC Rec: The Funding Council, HESA and HEIs should develop a common standard and principles which define types of retention information that need to be collected and reported

18 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Rec 4: Ensure that student support (personal tutoring and pastoral care) is based on students potential for development rather than their deficits Use personal development plans to focus on student development and enhancement Seek to pick up areas for improvement early as part of development planning before they become an issue Review staff development activities to emphasise those shown to increase students potential Review the effectiveness of relevant processes, especially tutor systems PAC Rec: HEIs should give personal tutoring a sufficiently high priority, with training and support for tutors and recognition in reward systems for academic staff

19 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Rec 5: Know whether students are eligible for Disabled Students Allowance, whether they are claiming it, and explore ways to support applications Good monitoring of disability procedures and joint work between retention staff and disability support staff Build up knowledge of who is likely to be eligible, and encourage greater disclosure by students Build up knowledge of types of support that work best Co-ordinate assistance to help students apply early and get support in place Support tutors in understanding how they can help students identify possible support PAC Rec: The Department should aim to make access straightforward and fair for all, and the Funding Council should follow up with HEIs if its forthcoming research indicates that eligible students are missing out on their entitlement to DSA

20 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Rec 6: Learn from other areas of the sector and share good practice Conferences and less formal events to share knowledge Seminars for staff to exchange ideas internally or with people from other institutions invited Incorporating key knowledge into staff development and processes Exchanges and peer review between HEIs, especially where circumstances are similar PAC Rec: The Funding Council should systematically evaluation the cost-effectiveness and impact of initiatives that it has directly funded, and should provide advice to HEIs on how best to assess the costs and outcomes of local initiatives. It should encourage HEIs with better retention to share good practice with those that are less successful.

21 HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Thank you Contact: jonathan.mackay@nao.gsi.gov.uk


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