Source: Michael Parkin
We have all heard the anecdotes: 鈥淲e only have six hours of classroom teaching each week,鈥 says an undergraduate from a well-known university in London. 鈥淚鈥檓 in my second year and I鈥檓 told university is all about private study. I just don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e getting value for money.鈥
The student goes on to explain that most of her teaching is conducted by doctoral students. She is paying 拢9,000 a year for six hours of teaching per week over 32 weeks, what passes for the academic year. Does that represent good value for money?
Discussions about the long-term sustainability of UK higher education tend to build upon an unassailable assumption that there must be more undergraduate funding. To even dare to question why undergraduate fees are so high invites derision, and arguments about whether the state should subsidise more, the student should pay more or universities should offer their own loans all exclude any discussion of value for money.
Of course, higher education is life-changing, the salary premium enjoyed by graduates is significant and the social value of education is unquestionably enormous. But why is 拢9,000 per year the magic number for fees? And why, as some would have it, should fees be uncapped?
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Speaking in the House of Commons last summer, David Willetts, at the time minister for universities and science, argued that the coalition鈥檚 higher education reforms 鈥渁re, we believe, contributing to maintaining the quality of education and bringing more money into universities鈥. Many are left wondering where the money has gone.
In the Higher Education Policy Institute- Higher Education Academy Student Academic Experience Survey 2014, the most recent edition published, 70 per cent of undergraduates at Scottish institutions, who typically pay no fees, believed that they were receiving good or very good value for money, compared with only 41 per cent in England.
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Asked to list their top three priorities for institutional expenditure, 48 per cent of undergraduates chose 鈥渞educing fee levels鈥 (rising to 55 per cent among first- and second-year students, who are subject to the higher fees regime).
Yet it is quite possible to have excellent teaching without being research-intensive, and to charge lower tuition fees even in a market where price is used as a proxy for quality. In my own area, a survey of undergraduate law students conducted by Legal Week magazine found that BPP University was regarded as offering the best value for money in the sector (fees range from 拢12,000 to 拢18,000 for an entire undergraduate law degree, compared with an average of 拢,000 at public universities). The same survey also placed BPP fifth for teaching quality out of 151 recognised university bodies, behind only the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, University College London and the University of Strathclyde.
The Hepi-HEA survey found that the average scheduled number of contact hours per week during term time is 14.2 hours. Respondents鈥 preferred classroom size is smaller groups, up to a maximum of 15 students. Moreover, 35 per cent of students wanted more teaching hours, 35 per cent wanted smaller classes, 34 per cent wanted better training for lecturers and 34 per cent wanted better learning facilities. This starts to tell us something about the economic model needed to support what students want and to delineate the cost of undergraduate education.
The typical academic contract for lecturers in the traditional public sector is based on a maximum of 18 hours per week for formalised teaching and 550 hours maximum in any given year. In a 探花视频 survey, the average salary for all academic staff (taken from Higher Education Statistics Agency data) in 2010-11 was identified as 拢47,8. Even if we round this up and take 拢50,000 as the average salary with a maximum teaching week of 14.2 hours (79 per cent of the maximum), this would suggest a direct teaching cost for a group of 15 students of about 拢50,000 (plus taxes and so on). Compare this with the 拢135,000 that 15 students would pay for a year鈥檚 study.
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While there are other costs, on the basis of the teaching hours set out above, each classroom should yield more than 拢400,000 of income a year, excluding use during evenings, weekends and outside term time. This does not take into account the savings that can be obtained from using online technology to deliver improved and individualised services to all students.
Funding also pays for property, support staff, libraries, the ever-increasing burden of regulation, quality assurance, and internal and external processes. Some of these hidden costs can be big-ticket items. However, data from the Society of College, National and University Libraries indicate that 鈥渁verage library expenditure per FTE student (拢358) was almost 3 per cent lower than last year鈥. Most universities are investing in improving their capital infrastructure, yet in the Hepi-HEA survey, only 11 per cent of students saw this as a priority.
So where has the extra money gone? I fear the answer may be that much of it has been ploughed into pension funds, research and vice-chancellors鈥 pay 鈥 in other words, on anything but the direct costs of undergraduate provision.
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