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US-style GPA is one numbers game too many, NUS argues

National Union of Students and businesses say stick to the Hear

Published on
May 16, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Source: Getty

Moving target: sector told to focus on launching one new system, not two

The introduction in the UK of a US-style grade point average will baffle employers and bog the sector down in 鈥渇ruitless and divisive debates鈥, according to the vice-president for union development at the National Union of Students.

Vicki Baars鈥 comments are among the latest high-profile criticisms of the proposed overhaul of the UK鈥檚 traditional degree class system, led by a group of universities mainly from the Russell Group.

Speaking at a conference in London on 8 May, she said the sector should get on with introducing the Higher Education Achievement Report (Hear) before embarking on something new.

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The Hear, which is backed by Universities UK but not universally supported by institutions, is intended to give employers a more rounded view of a graduate by detailing extracurricular activities and specific exam results, and could include either a degree class or a GPA score.

Employers, who were 鈥渏ust getting used鈥 to the Hear, would think universities were 鈥渙bsessed with constant turbulence鈥 if they also moved to a GPA system, Ms Baars told the event, Higher Education Achievement Reports (HEAR): Implementation, Employer Engagement and the Future of Degree Classification.

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Ms Baars said: 鈥淚f we keep moving the goalposts, how can we expect our students to score a goal? Let鈥檚 focus on promoting the system we鈥檝e got.鈥

Her comments follow a resolution at the NUS鈥 national conference in April to oppose the introduction of a GPA system unless it was done by the majority of universities in the UK and across a broad range of institutions.

Because the universities looking to introduce the GPA system are mostly from the Russell Group, the move 鈥渞isks creating a divide between Russell Group graduates and those from other institutions鈥, the NUS concluded.

Anthony Smith, vice-provost for education at University College London, responded at the conference to the NUS objections. 鈥淚 suspect if they had just been awarded a 2:2 they might have a slightly different view,鈥 he said.

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鈥淚 imagine there will be a lengthy period of transition,鈥 he continued, adding, 鈥淚 think ultimately the use of the GPA鈥ill win the day.鈥

GPA advocates say that its introduction would encourage students to work harder because it takes into account all their marks and eliminates the 鈥渃liff edge鈥 effect whereby all graduates with a 2:2 are ruled out by some employers.

UCL had hoped to pilot a GPA system this academic year, but last month it emerged that this was unlikely to happen before 2014-15. David Willetts, the universities and science minister, has asked the Higher Education Academy to broker a 鈥渘ational debate鈥 on whether the GPA could be rolled out nationwide.

Oxford Brookes University has already announced that it will bring in a GPA model alongside the traditional degree classification system from September.

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The conference also heard from Lynn Martin, president of the Institute for Small Business and Entrepreneurship, who said that the use of both the Hear and a GPA system could confuse small firms.

Based on feedback on the Hear from her institute鈥檚 600 members, 鈥渁 lot of them are deeply depressed by its complexity, and its lack of accessibility to them as small-firm owners鈥, Professor Martin said.

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david.matthews@tsleducation.com

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