The Westminster government has dropped plans for a subject-level teaching excellence framework (TEF), signalled a move away from âgoldâ, âsilverâ and âbronzeâ categories and suggested that the next assessment is unlikely to take place this year.
In its long-awaited  to the independent review of the TEF, led by Dame Shirley Pearce, the government says that there will be an end to the current approach of the TEF running each year and it will instead be âa periodic exercise, taking place every four or five yearsâ.
The government says that the decisions to move way from an annual assessment and to scrap subject-level TEF ratings were taken to reduce the burden on institutions.
Universities have previously been given a rating of gold, silver or bronze in the TEF, but the government says it agreed with Dame Shirleyâs independent review of the exercise, which was also published today, that there should, in future, be four TEF ratings overall.
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It says the top three categories would be âsignifiers of excellence to varying degreesâ, while the new bottom category would âcapture those providers failing to show sufficient evidence of excellence, and it will be made clear that these providers will need to improve the quality of their provisionâ. It says it will work with the Office for Students to confirm the names for the four ratings âin due courseâ.
The response says that the OfS will consult on a new TEF framework and assessments will be completed and published by September 2022. OfS chief executive Nicola Dandridge said she expected to consult on proposals for the new TEF in the spring.
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The government says that it mostly agreed with the high-level recommendations in Dame Shirleyâs review, which is dated August 2019.
However, the  called for the name of the scheme to be changed to âmore accurately reflect what is being measured and assessedâ, proposing the âeducational excellence framework (EdEF)â as an alternative. The government rejected this recommendation, saying that the current name âhas a well-established brand value, and is increasingly understood, in the UK and internationally, to mean a rating on teaching, learning and student outcomesâ.
The review also recommended a structure based on four aspects of quality: teaching and learning environment, student satisfaction, educational gains and graduate outcomes. The government says that it will ask the OfS to build a new framework based on this broad structure, but will replace student satisfaction with student academic experience.
The OfSâ  exercise in 2018-19, the results of which were also published today, highlighted significant issues with such assessments. While it found that it was âcommon for individual providers to receive the full spectrum of ratings across their subjectsâ, therefore demonstrating the âimportance of taking account of this variation in the TEF outcomesâ, it also found significant limitations in the data at subject level.
The OfS report says that a subject would need to cover several hundred students for the metrics to ârobustly inform assessmentsâ, while subject-level ratings were also very heavily concentrated at the silver level.
The Pearce review recommended that a subject-level exercise should be incorporated into the provider-level assessment and inform provider-level ratings.
Tom Ward, professor of mathematics at the University of Leeds, and former deputy vice-chancellor (student education) at the institution, said that the slowing of the cycle and abandoning the subject-level TEF were both welcome, but the latter should not be scrapped âbecause it is a hassle or because universities donât want itâ.
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âIt should be abandoned because if you put together the huge statistical validity problems with the wildly variable way in which subjects and programmes map onto each other, there was no way to make it meaningful and useful,â he said.
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He added that the proposed four new grades were an improvement but they still formed âa linear ranking rather than an acknowledgement of quality of different typesâ.
âI still donât see how an applicant will find it useful to compare institutions with very different missions,â he said.
Professor Ward also said that the decision to stick with the existing name of the TEF âfeels like a missed opportunity to align a key regulatory process with evidence-led future-facing educationâ.
Paul Ashwin, professor of higher education at Lancaster University, said that running the TEF every four to five years would mean that information provided to students âwill be out of date and potentially misleadingâ.
âHow misleading this information turns out to be will depend on the extent to which TEF outcomes are metrics driven â in which case, they will be very misleading â or whether they are focused on how institutions use the metrics to enhance their provision, in which case they will be more useful,â he said.
He added that it was âpositive that enhancing quality is now recognised as the primary purpose of the TEFâ, but a crucial question was how this was reflected in the redesign.Â
Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union, which has long called for the exercise to be scrapped, said she was âdisappointed that the government is pushing ahead with the TEFâ.
âThe TEFâs metrics were already an extremely poor proxy for quality but will be of even less use in light of the impact of Covid on employment and student feedback,â she said.
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Julia Buckingham, president of Universities UK, said it was âpositiveâ to see planned reforms of the TEF âin line with ambitions to reduce bureaucracyâ.
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