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Course value means more than graduate employment, says UUK

Representative body says institutions should consider contextual data on issues such as local and NHS employment, alongside metrics preferred by ministers

Published on
January 17, 2022
Last updated
January 17, 2022
One bad apple - one rotten apple in a group of a dozen apples.
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Universities in England are being encouraged to use 鈥渃ontextual鈥 measures when attempting to identify the value of聽courses, including whether they support the local economy, creative industries and public professions such as teaching and nursing.

Setting out a framework for reviewing course value, the result of a pilot with almost a dozen institutions, Universities UK said institutions should still seek to use 鈥渃ore鈥 metrics like student satisfaction, course outcomes and graduate employment as measures.

叠耻迟听, a policy response from the sector to the Westminster government鈥檚 wish to target 鈥渓ow-value鈥 or 鈥渓ow-quality鈥 courses, also suggests contextual metrics that could be used to 鈥渞eflect the wider environment in which students choose a course鈥.

An executive summary to the framework acknowledges that there is a strong interest 鈥渇rom students, the Office for Students (OfS) and government in England about the quality and value of courses鈥 and that 鈥渋t is in universities鈥 interests to address perceptions of low-quality courses鈥.

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鈥淗owever, regulation and funding based on narrow graduate outcome measures will harm the government鈥檚 ability to support levelling up, improve social mobility and deliver student choice,鈥 it adds.

The framework itself says that when reviewing courses provision, universities should 鈥渋ntegrate at least one or more鈥 metrics from three 鈥渃ore鈥 areas: student and graduate views; student outcomes; and graduate prospects. These metrics include publicly available datasets such as the National Student Survey, continuation rates and the Graduate Outcomes survey.

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But the framework then also suggests the additional use of 鈥減otential contextual measures that demonstrate the value of a course and how this aligns with student needs and key government priority areas, including support for local and national economic growth and social responsibility鈥.

On economic growth, these measures include the share of graduates who find employment or further study locally and the proportion working in high-growth industries, especially in poorer areas.

In terms of social responsibility, it suggests universities can look at attainment gaps between different groups of students, the contribution to essential public services such as the NHS and teaching, or how many graduates work in creative industries.

As well as setting out the framework on course monitoring, it also asks institutions to publish a statement covering the steps they have taken in the area by early 2023.

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Julia Buckingham, chair of UUK鈥檚 advisory group for programme reviews and former UUK president, said that universities 鈥渕ust be able to communicate why they offer the courses they do, and the value of those courses, to prospective students, employers and the public鈥.

鈥淎lthough UK universities have a strong track record of delivering high-quality courses which equip students with the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to progress to rewarding careers, universities know there is a need to address public concerns about potentially low-value courses,鈥 she said.

鈥淭his framework will help universities take a more consistent and transparent approach to annual course reviews and support them in taking decisive action should a course fall below the high, world-class standards they rightly set.鈥

simon.baker@timeshighereducation.com

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