The governmentâs surprise abolition of the student number cap for England earlier this month had bloggers across the country scrambling to have their say.
The WonkHE blog for his reaction to chancellor George Osborneâs announcement.
âLike everyone else I thought this yearâs Autumn Statement was going to focus on the cost of living, energy and fuel prices,â he writes. âFor all I know it might have done but I havenât yet got past the announcement of 30,000 extra university places next year and the abolition of all number controls in 2015-16.â
Mr Westwood says he is pleased that âafter all of the arguments about both the affordability and the desirability of a mass higher education system, George Osborne has come down firmly and decisively in favour of bothâ. He describes the announcement as a âgame-changerâ, although adds that it is âfiendishly difficultâ to assess whether ministersâ plans to pay for the expansion through the sale of the student loan book are feasible.
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âThere will be more places AND more competition â great news for those institutions already doing well â more worrying for those that arenât currently able to reach their target numbers under the existing system,â he concludes.
On the Vox Political blog, journalist he feels Mr Osborne neglected to include in his speech. The chancellor said that the additional funding would be âfinanced by selling the old student loan book, allowing thousands more to achieve their potentialâ; however, Mr Sivier feels he should have added that this would be âpushing thousands into the hands of debt collectorsâ.
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Author and higher education expert on his Critical Education blog that one of the âbiggest conundrumsâ resulting from the announcement is âhow to control the finances without âcoreâ recruitment caps set for each institutionâ. He suggests that the answer could lie in the Browne review, which recommended introducing what he describes as a âdifferent form of controlâ.
âHome and EU students with university places would only qualify for âstudent supportâ, loans and maintenance grants, if they achieved a minimum âUcas tariffâ,â he explains.
He then quotes Mr Osborne saying that the proposed expansion would be for âyoung people who have worked hard at school, got the results, want to go on learning and want to take out a loan to pay for itâ.
âA minimum entry requirement of this kind would keep control of finances, but test the limits of traditional âinstitutional autonomyâ and present difficulties for dealing with other qualifications and other forms of experience,â he concludes.
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The New Left Project, which promises âhigh quality comment and analysis on issues of concern to the political leftâ, used its blog â perhaps unsurprisingly â . âOf all the lines in George Osborneâs autumn statement speech this week, the idea that UK higher education is on a âsecure footingâ ranked high on a scale of taking the bloody piss,â it says. âThis was days after the second strike of higher education workers this term.â
Send links to topical, insightful and quirky online comment by and about academics to chris.parr@tsleducation.com
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