Support our Nation today - please donate here
News

Top universities risk ‘elites’ domination as teenagers turn backs on degrees

06 Aug 2024 5 minute read
University graduates.. Photo Chris Radburn/PA Wire.

Prestigious universities could become “the preserve of privileged elites” even more as a greater number of disadvantaged students appear to be turning away from degrees, an education expert has warned.

Lee Elliot Major, professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, said more students waiting for their results are questioning the value of higher education following negative narratives about universities over the past year.

Growing cost-of-living concerns, the attainment gap in schools since the pandemic, and anti-university rhetoric could see this year’s A-level cohort seek alternative routes over higher education, experts have suggested.

Concern

Ahead of A-level results day next week, Prof Elliot Major said he was concerned that young people from disadvantaged backgrounds across the country will be “put off” from studying university degrees disproportionately.

He added that more privileged students, including pupils educated in private schools, could be more likely to achieve higher A-level grades and secure places at selective universities over their peers after pandemic disruption.

Prof Elliot Major told the PA news agency: “It’s the Covid legacy, it’s the widening attainment gaps, it’s the cost-of-living crisis, which I think is getting worse by the year, and then you’ve got this anti-university rhetoric that we’ve heard constantly.

“So I think those things are probably having an impact and it’s a real pity because of course what we know is university can be incredibly transformative in terms of young people’s lives.”

His comments came as students across Scotland are set to receive their results for their Nationals, Highers, Advanced Highers and national certificates on Tuesday.

Students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their A-level results on Thursday next week.

Figures released by Ucas last month showed a decline in the proportion of school leavers in the UK population applying to higher education this year.

The application rate for UK 18-year-olds has fallen to 41.9%, from 42.1% last year and 44.1% in 2022, according to the data from the admissions service.

Value

Prof Elliot Major said: “Many more school leavers are questioning the value of more academic study, worried by the cost of living crisis on campus, and digesting the constant diet of negative headlines about higher education, from ‘Mickey Mouse’ courses to financial turmoil across the sector.”

He added: “From a social mobility perspective, the concern is that students from lower-income backgrounds are disproportionately turning away from higher education, potentially missing out on the transformative impact it can have on their futures.

“In the post-pandemic era of widening school divides in the race to secure the top grades, the fear is that the country’s most prestigious universities will become even more the preserve of privileged elites.”

The latest Ucas figures suggest the application gap between the most and least advantaged students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland has widened compared to last year.

As of June 30 – the final deadline to apply to up to five courses simultaneously through Ucas – applications from disadvantaged 18-year-olds in England fell to 25.4%, while applications from the most advantaged rose to 60.7%.

Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK (UUK), said the cost-of-living crisis and attainment gaps in schools following the Covid-19 pandemic had contributed to the higher education participation gaps.

She told PA: “The other thing that I think hasn’t helped is in the last couple of years, under the previous government, there was quite a strong anti-university rhetoric.

“So ministers would really openly question the value of going to university and the [former] prime minister did this on a number of occasions. I think that really has an effect.

“I was talking to somebody recently who had met a student who had decided not to go to university because they had been offered a place and then they talked to their parents and their parents sort of referred back to what ministers had been saying about ‘well it’s not worth going to university’. They didn’t take the place up as a result. That’s a real tragedy.”

“Challenging”

Rose Stephenson, director of policy and advocacy at the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) think tank, said: “School leavers are aware of the cost-of-living crisis and that the current maintenance support package is no longer fit for purpose.

“This, combined with the negative rhetoric from the previous UK Government, is resulting in a challenging recruitment environment for higher education providers.

“Whilst alternative routes into the workforce are welcome, it is imperative that students have the ability and drive to go on to higher education don’t have their ambitions curtailed due to their economic circumstances. I am concerned we are going to see this trend develop this year.”

A spokesman for the Russell Group, which includes many of the most selective and research-intensive universities in the UK, said: “Latest Ucas figures for this year do not show a significant drop in demand from disadvantaged applicants, with application rates for UK students of all backgrounds similar to last year.

“However, our universities understand that cost-of-living pressures and the loss of learning from the pandemic disproportionately impact on disadvantaged young people.

“That is why they have introduced a range of measures to support students from these backgrounds, such as accommodation and work experience bursaries and academic programmes to support the transition to university.”


Support our Nation today

For the price of a cup of coffee a month you can help us create an independent, not-for-profit, national news service for the people of Wales, by the people of Wales.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
4 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Linda Jones
Linda Jones
22 days ago

The debt incurred from a uni degree today is huge particularly as there is no guarantee of a decent job at the end of it. Cardiff retail is packed with highly qualified staff with good degrees from top unis who cannot get a decent job.
Today graduates need good contacts ( nepotism rules ok), a post grad qualification ( no funding for that) and a well off family to support them through unpaid internships.
Little wonder applications are falling from working class people. Turning all colleges into unis was a mistake. So too turning unis into businesses.

hdavies15
hdavies15
22 days ago

Maybe this will eventually restore sanity into the whole business of higher education but it will have to endure pain in the meantime. If young people elect to follow other pathways to getting decent employment and conditions then so be it. That universities ever came close to some kind of monopoly on personal progress is in itself a symptom of rampant “classism”. Destroy the cred of bullsh*t degrees from degree factories is a step in the right direction . Let some of them go to the wall. They have no more right to survive than a badly run commercial business… Read more »

includemeout
includemeout
21 days ago

Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK (UUK), said:

“I was talking to somebody recently who had met a student who had decided not to go to university because…”

I’m not sure her data gathering methods will pass the peer review…

Jack
Jack
21 days ago

Is it a privileged elite to have student loans of £45,000 +? Some university degrees are needed, some are not. Finally some people are recognising they can get well paid jobs without going to university. Well done to them.

Our Supporters

All information provided to Nation.Cymru will be handled sensitively and within the boundaries of the Data Protection Act 2018.