Can a for-profit college owned by a private equity firm do better at widening participation for poor students than a publicly funded university?
GSM London, which in 2012 opened a huge campus in west London, would have you believe that it is possible. GSM has spent ÂŁ30 million on its Greenford site, taking out a long-term lease on the former offices of GlaxoSmithKline, while also retaining its original home in Greenwich.
Since it was bought by Sovereign Capital in 2011, the institution, formerly known as Greenwich School of Management, has rapidly increased its number of students with public-backed loans. It received ÂŁ11Â million in fee funding via the Student Loans Company in 2012â13, more than any other private provider and more than the London School of Economics. According to SLC figures, 3,366 GSM students had public-backed fee loans in 2012, up from just 496 in 2010 â a sevenfold rise in two years.
From central London by Underground, Greenford is a bit of a trek west into the suburbs. The upper floors of the GSM building look out over the greenery of Horsenden Hill.
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Alison Wride, GSMâs provost, described the student body as âvery widening participationâ â people who âhavenât grown up assuming they will go to universityâ. She said: âWe have the opportunity to change their lives.â
Entry requirements are two passes at A*-E for A levels, with options on vocational qualifications as well. There is a foundation year entry point on all programmes for students who do not meet those entry requirements. âWe deliver most of our teaching in smaller groups and think high numbers of lecture hours are not conducive to good engagement,â said Professor Wride.
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Is GSM doing something that a publicly funded university could not in terms of widening participation? âIÂ donât see why a public university couldnât replicate what we are doing,â said Professor Wride. âBut they are not choosing to.â
GSM is not a university so does not feature in league tables, although Professor Wride expects it will in future. But that means there is no âtensionâ between widening participation and league table positions, which are based partly on entry tariffs.
âWe all know there are postâ92 universities who were doing much more on widening participation [but] have changed their direction and talked about upping entry qualifications, because why would [a publicly funded university] want to sit at the bottom of the league tables?â
She observed: âFrom the point of view of social mobility and what we can do, it ought to be an irrelevance, our ownership model.â
And Professor Wride continued: âItâs our studentsâ money, but thereâs a facilitation and a contribution from the taxpayer. Weâre very aware of itâŠWe watch the money we spend and we think aboutâŠâis there good value for the student experience?âââ
GSM focuses mainly on business and management subjects. But it also offers degrees in other subjects with âclear employability linksâ. The provision is âall degreesâ, validated by Plymouth University, Professor Wride said. In terms of future degree-awarding powers and university title, she said that it was âfair to say they are on the agendaâ but that there was no firm timescale and it would apply only âwhen readyâ.
GSM recently passed institutional review by the Quality Assurance Agency after falling short on two out of three criteria in its initial review in 2012.
Professor Wride said that the Greenford campus allows GSM to âspread our wings beyond southeast Londonâ, and she added that there is âpotentialâ to grow student numbers âto 10,000 plusâ across the two campuses (she put the present enrolment at about 6,500).
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But that was dependent on government policy about student number caps at private providers and a range of factors, she stressed. âWe are not seeking growth for its own sakeâŠ[whatâs] paramount is the quality of the student experience.â
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Is the ownerâs business model based on rapidly expanding the number of students with public-backed loans? âThe investment obviously is based on the premise of growthâŠYou invest to sustain growth, but that isnât the same as saying, âPile it high, sell it cheap, extract the surplusâ,â Professor Wride replied. âIf someone had come to me three years ago and said, âWould you like to run this institution, itâs got a thousand students?â, Iâd have said ânoâ. Youâre not going to be a serious higher education institution at that level unless youâre very niche.â
She added that the growth is about âbecoming a mainstream player in the sectorâ, albeit without a mainstream ownership structure.
Professor Wride noted that public money passes to the private sector in many fields, be it buying arms, medicines or school meals or paying private companies to run buildings under private finance initiatives. âAs an economist, Iâm not sure IÂ see the difference between a PFI and what weâre doing,â she said.
In numbers
ÂŁ11m - Amount of fee funding GSM received via the Student Loans Company in 2012â13
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