University access agreements to deprive institutions of funds
9 February 2011
Ahead of tomorrow's expected announcement of how university access agreements will work, UCU has warned that every single English institution with undergraduates will have to charge more than £6,000 fees just to plug the funding gap created by huge cuts to teaching budgets.
The average fee will need to be £6,863.
When pushing hard to persuade Liberal Democrat MPs to break their pre-election pledge to vote against any rise in fees, coalition ministers made much of the fact that any institution wishing to charge more than £6,000 a year would need to agree an 'access agreement' with the university access regulator OFFA. The government said that any institution that breaches or fails to deliver its access agreement would face a fine of up to £500,000.
However, analysis by UCU highlights how the entire landscape of higher education will change under the new system. Shifting the burden of paying for a university education from the state to the student will not generate the extra funds universities say they need, nor will it provide an enhanced experience for the individual student.
The union said that if the access agreements are vigorously enforced then some universities will end up with less money than they have now or face fines if they charge higher fees in an attempt to break even. If, however, they are not enforced then there will be accusations that the agreements were merely a sop to Liberal Democrat MPs looking for an excuse to break their pre-election promise not to vote for higher fees.
Earlier this week a leaked document from Cambridge University confirmed that it would charge the maximum £9,000 a year. The sector is now waiting to see what other institutions will charge and which universities will be the first to show their hand.
UCU general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: 'Government claims that universities will only charge more than £6,000 a year in exceptional circumstances are completely bogus when one scratches at the surface of the plans. By slashing the teaching grant and making students foot the bill we will see whole subject areas starved of public funds and possibly forced to close.
'We are not alone in expressing concerns that some universities will charge the full fee simply because they won't want their courses to be seen as inferior because they cost less. We are entering unchartered territory for universities, students and families and are now starting to see just what a terrible move tripling fees and creating a market in degrees was. It will be interesting to see if the access agreements have any teeth or were merely a sop to Liberal Democrat MPs desperately looking for an excuse to cling to as they broke their pre-election promise to vote against any increase in fees.'
The full report is available below.
Estimate of fees institutions would need to charge students to break even ranked highest to lowest
Institution | Fee required to maintain current levels of resource £ |
Guildhall School of Music & Drama | 7,709 |
Newman University College | 7,695 |
Thames Valley University | 7,598 |
Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance | 7,567 |
St George's Hospital Medical School | 7,544 |
Central School of Speech and Drama | 7,527 |
Royal Academy of Music | 7,527 |
Royal College of Music | 7,527 |
University of the Arts London | 7,409 |
Rose Bruford College | 7,401 |
University of East London | 7,395 |
London Metropolitan University | 7,392 |
Conservatoire for Dance and Drama | 7,379 |
Ravensbourne | 7,373 |
University of Salford | 7,348 |
University for the Creative Arts | 7,295 |
Roehampton University | 7,291 |
Imperial College London | 7,291 |
Leeds College of Music | 7,274 |
Institute of Education | 7,254 |
Norwich University College of the Arts | 7,239 |
Harper Adams University College | 7,233 |
University of Bolton | 7,172 |
University of Westminster | 7,171 |
University of Cumbria | 7,159 |
The Arts University College at Bournemouth | 7,147 |
University College Plymouth St Mark & St John | 7,136 |
Royal Northern College of Music | 7,116 |
University of Sunderland | 7,116 |
Bishop Grosseteste University College, Lincoln | 7,111 |
University of Worcester | 7,102 |
University of Wolverhampton | 7,084 |
University College London | 7,077 |
University College Falmouth | 7,055 |
Southampton Solent University | 7,043 |
Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts | 7,019 |
City University, London | 7,018 |
University of Chichester | 6,990 |
University of Huddersfield | 6,970 |
Edge Hill University | 6,948 |
University of Brighton | 6,931 |
University of Greenwich | 6,926 |
Goldsmiths College, University of London | 6,918 |
University College Birmingham | 6,883 |
Middlesex University | 6,881 |
London South Bank University | 6,866 |
Royal Holloway, University of London | 6,863 |
Leeds Metropolitan University | 6,858 |
Bath Spa University | 6,854 |
Queen Mary, University of London | 6,849 |
Writtle College | 6,847 |
Buckinghamshire New University | 6,845 |
University of Gloucestershire | 6,842 |
Staffordshire University | 6,829 |
Kingston University | 6,825 |
Brunel University | 6,822 |
Sheffield Hallam University | 6,818 |
University of Leeds | 6,815 |
Liverpool John Moores University | 6,802 |
University of Bedfordshire | 6,793 |
Loughborough University | 6,792 |
King's College London | 6,791 |
University of Derby | 6,780 |
University Campus Suffolk | 6,767 |
University of Northampton | 6,767 |
University of Bath | 6,765 |
University of Bradford | 6,754 |
Liverpool Hope University | 6,750 |
St Mary's University College | 6,748 |
Teesside University | 6,746 |
De Montfort University | 6,737 |
University of Lincoln | 6,722 |
Oxford Brookes University | 6,721 |
Aston University | 6,718 |
Nottingham Trent University | 6,714 |
University of Chester | 6,713 |
Anglia Ruskin University | 6,705 |
Royal Agricultural College | 6,703 |
Coventry University | 6,698 |
University of Surrey | 6,691 |
York St John University | 6,675 |
Leeds Trinity University College | 6,655 |
University of Portsmouth | 6,645 |
University of Southampton | 6,644 |
Bournemouth University | 6,641 |
Birmingham City University | 6,617 |
University of West of England, Bristol | 6,609 |
University of Plymouth | 6,595 |
University of Hull | 6,589 |
University of Bristol | 6,581 |
Canterbury Christ Church University | 6,580 |
University of Hertfordshire | 6,571 |
London School of Economics and Political Science | 6,563 |
University of Reading | 6,561 |
School of Oriental and African Studies | 6,554 |
Heythrop College | 6,547 |
Manchester Metropolitan University | 6,533 |
University of Exeter | 6,530 |
University of Sussex | 6,513 |
University of Winchester | 6,506 |
University of Liverpool | 6,503 |
University of Essex | 6,502 |
University of Nottingham | 6,500 |
University of Newcastle upon Tyne | 6,486 |
University of Kent | 6,478 |
Durham University | 6,475 |
University of Sheffield | 6,468 |
Keele University | 6,465 |
University of Birmingham | 6,465 |
University of East Anglia | 6,440 |
University of Manchester | 6,411 |
University of Cambridge | 6,407 |
University of Oxford | 6,372 |
University of Warwick | 6,365 |
University of York | 6,360 |
Lancaster University | 6,345 |
University of Leicester | 6,323 |
Courtauld Institute of Art | 6,251 |
Average | 6,863 |
The figure for the resource needed per HEFCE Price Group C (subjects with a studio, laboratory or fieldwork element) and D (classroom-based) student to break even is based on the total HEFCE Notional grant per FTE student in these Price Groups, plus the current flat rate and maximum top-up tuition fee (£3,290 in 2010-11), divided by the total number of Price Group C and D students at the particular institution. It should be noted that some Price Group C subjects, such as mathematics, are likely to be protected.
Notes to table
HEFCE = Higher Education Funding Council for England
Price Group C = Subjects with a studio, laboratory or fieldwork element
Price Group D = classroom-based subjects
FD = Foundation Degree
UG = undergraduate
Standard resource = HEFCE funding per full-time equivalent student where price group C = £5,136 and price group D = £3,951 in 2010-11
Notional grant = HEFCE funding minus £1,310 flat rate tuition fee
£3,290 tuition fee = flat rate + top-up in 2010-11
Source: www.hefce.ac.uk
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