The overall satisfaction of students with higher education in the UK has risen slightly but a number of universities have seen large falls in their ratings, according to the latest results of the National Student Survey.
About 330,000 students at 400 universities, colleges and other providers completed the 2019 NSS, about 10,000 responses higher than last year and representing 72per cent of those eligible to complete the survey.
The response rate was up 2percentage points on last year, which bringsit back up to the level seen beforea 2017 student boycottin protestagainst the teaching excellence framework, which uses NSS metrics.
However, responses at a small number of institutions this year still failed to surpass the 50per cent response rate threshold needed to publish results, including the universities of Oxford and Cambridge.
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Overall, among larger higher education providers, the University of St Andrews came out top again this year for overall satisfaction, with thepercentage of students saying that they were satisfied with the quality of their course increasing to 95per cent.
But there were large shifts for some universities further down the list. Those seeing big drops included Leeds Trinity University, whose satisfaction percentage fell 10points to 77per cent, adrop ofabout 100 places in the table of larger providers.
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Others fallingseveral places on overall satisfaction included the University of East London, whose score declinedfrom 85per cent to 80per cent; the University of Lincoln, whichslipped out of the top20 universities with its satisfaction score falling 4percentage points;and the University of Buckingham, whichdropped out of the top 10 despite being one of the highest rated in previous years.
Examples of institutions moving the other way includedthe University of Dundee,whose overall satisfaction score rose almost 3percentage points to put it in the top five, and the University of West London, whichclimbed from the bottom half of the table to the top 20withan 8percentage point rise.
The London School of Economics also saw a big increase, 7percentage points, in its overall satisfaction score to 78per cent, although this still placed it towards the bottom end of the overall table for larger providers.
Overall, 84per cent of UK studentsreported beingsatisfied with the quality of their course, up from 83per cent last year.
The survey also continued to show much lower scores onstudent feedback. In England, just 62per cent thought it was clear how student feedback had been acted on, for example.
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However, some of the lowest scores came when students were asked whether they felt their course was well organised and ran smoothly: just 54per cent believed this to be the case in the bottom 10per cent of English providers.
There were also very low satisfaction ratings for students’ unions, with only 57per cent of students at the average higher education provider believing their union “effectively represents students’ academic interests”.
Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, said the numbers on students’ unions “should be a wake-up call for the new student union officerswho are taking up their posts up and down the UK, [and] for the leadership of the National Union of Students”.
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Meanwhile, he said that althoughit was good that overall student satisfaction was rising, the NSS was still “very limited” for assessing the whole student experiencebecause it surveyed only final-year students and did not ask about contact hours and workload.
“In my view, it is time for the survey to be completely revamped. Until this happens, there will continue to be no official data on how hard students really work,” Mr Hillman said.
simon.baker@timeshighereducation.com
National Student Survey 2019: top 10
| Institution | Score (% satisfied) | Change from 2018 (percentage points) |
| University of St Andrews | 95.49 | 1.67 |
| Aberystwyth University | 91.12 | 1.30 |
| Conservatoire for Dance and Drama | 90.79 | 0.23 |
| Loughborough University | 90.47 | 2.41 |
| University of Dundee | 90.37 | 2.69 |
| Harper Adams University | 90.07 | 0.71 |
| Royal Agricultural University | 89.37 | 7.64 |
| Keele University | 88.87 | −0.68 |
| University of York | 88.66 | 4.05 |
National Student Survey 2019: bottom 10
| Institution | Score (% satisfied) | Change from 2018 (percentage points) |
| Ravensbourne University London | 68.12 | −4.53 |
| Glasgow School of Art | 68.6 | 1.81 |
| University of the Arts London | 71.16 | −1.12 |
| SRUC (Scotland’s Rural College) | 72.17 | 2.28 |
| Plymouth College of Art | 73.08 | −3.6 |
| St George’s Hospital Medical School | 74.55 | −2.82 |
| University of Bradford | 76.43 | −1.41 |
| Bath Spa University | 76.45 | −4.33 |
| Leeds Trinity University | 76.68 | −9.92 |
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Note: Does not include alternative providers or institutions with fewer than 1,000 undergraduates.
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