Students whose parents did not go to university should have free tuition in their first year to boost participation and retention for those from disadvantaged backgrounds, says a report on how to bridge educational divides in the UK after Brexit.
Such a policy would signal 鈥渢he importance of overcoming this barrier to educational attainment鈥 and form part of a package of measures that would enable universities to help bridge social, economic and regional divides in the country.
The proposal is put forward in a report from the Higher Education Policy Institute, co-authored by Lord Kerslake, chair of governors at Sheffield Hallam University and former head of the Civil Service.
According to Making Universities Matter: How Higher Education Can Help to Heal a Divided Britain 鈥 co-written with Sir Chris Husbands, vice-chancellor of Sheffield Hallam, and Natalie Day, the university鈥檚 head of policy and strategy 鈥 鈥渢here is a serious danger that universities continue to be out of step鈥 with the political direction of the country in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union.
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As a result, policies need to be found that involve them in solutions that 鈥渞each out to parts of the country who have felt left-behind by education and economic opportunities鈥, the report says.
Recommendations in the report, which was published on 27聽February, target three key areas, including better 鈥減artnerships鈥 with institutions such as further education colleges and improved 鈥減rogression鈥 in higher education for disadvantaged groups.
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On progression, the report says some ground had been made in the past few years, but 鈥渞ecent work has made it clear that there is a long road ahead to eliminate inequalities in higher education鈥.
In particular, issues around widening participation had been 鈥渄isproportionately focused on outreach and access, with too little emphasis on how to retain and ensure success and progression for students once they are at university鈥.
The report suggests that making the first year of a degree free for any student whose parents did not go to university would tackle a 鈥渕ajor influence on educational progression鈥.
鈥淥nce in study, the onus would rightly then be on universities and colleges to nurture, challenge and inspire these students,鈥 it聽adds.
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Another recommendation of the report related to widening participation is for the government to put 拢25聽million a聽year into the national outreach programme in England, now known as Uni Connect, a figure that should then be matched by compulsory contributions from universities.
Elsewhere, the paper calls for the establishment of a National Skills Council for England that would involve leaders from further and higher education in driving 鈥渃ollaboration and encourage locally focused partnerships to address skills shortages and educational disadvantage鈥.
There is also a recommendation for universities to help create a 鈥渃ivic index鈥 to help institutions 鈥渕easure and monitor their engagement activity with their local area鈥.
Lord Kerslake, who has been leading the UK2070 Commission on regional inequality, said involvement in the 鈥渇undamental鈥 reshaping of the UK鈥檚 economic and social model was universities鈥 鈥渃ivic responsibility, and it needs to become core to our institutional values鈥.
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