In a circular letter to institutions about 2013-14 student numbers sent on 18 December, the Higher Education Funding Council for England says that it could allow flexibility on the governmentâs âABBâ policy to help selective universities to grant fair access.
Vice-chancellors and other senior sector figures have raised concerns on fair-access grounds about the governmentâs policy to allow universities unlimited recruitment of students with the highest grades. They fear it could hinder institutionsâ ability to accommodate disadvantaged students without top grades.
So as not to create extra spending on student finance, the government must estimate the likely number of students with ABB or above at A level, recruitment of whom will not be capped from this autumn, and deduct that number from the âcoreâ allocation granted to universities. The move is an extension of this yearâs policy of allowing unlimited recruitment of students with AAB or above.
Universities with high proportions of ABB students will thus have only a small number of non-ABB places to accommodate students without top grades.
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Hefce says that âthe student number control limits we have set provide all institutions with sufficient numbers to offer fair accessâ.
However, it adds that âif for any reason institutions believe that the provisional limitsâŠare insufficient to allow them to maintain fair accessâŠthey should submit an appeal for an increase to the limit (by 1 February 2013), supported with appropriate evidenceâ.
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The letter also says that universities falling short of their core student number allocations this year will not have their allocations cut next year unless the shortfalls are âextremeâ.
Hefce says the approach, which reverses its previous guidance, recognises that âdue to transient effects from the introduction of the new fee regime, 2012-13 might be an atypical year for recruitmentâ.
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