University Applications Down By 8.7% Ucas Figures Show

Ucas Figures

Huffington Post UK   First Posted: 30/01/2012 11:51 Updated: 30/01/2012 13:01

The numbers of UK students applying to start university this autumn has dropped by 8.7% compared to the same point last year, official Ucas figures show, as tuition fees are set to rise.

The biggest impact is seen in applications for England's universities with a drop in 9.9%, the data released on Monday reveals. Overall, the drop in students from home and abroad is 7.4%, while fees are set to nearly triple to a maximum of £9,000 this autumn.

But Universities UK said the "dip is far less dramatic than many were initially predicting".

The application rates of 18-year-olds from England's most disadvantaged areas has decreased "slightly" but surprisingly, there has been a larger decrease in the rate from the country's most advantaged areas. There is "no clear change" in applications from Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

Universities and Science Minister David Willetts called the 0.2% decrease in disadvantaged students "encouraging".

Ucas chief executive Mary Curnock Cook said the "widely expressed concerns" about recent funding arrangement changes in higher education having a disproportionate effect on more disadvantaged groups were "not borne out by the data".

"However," she added. "I remain concerned about the wide and increasing gap between the application rate of men compared to women."

According to the figures, the application rate of 18-year-old males has decreased, while the difference in application rates between men and women has increased.

Applications by students from countries within the European Union, who will also be affected by the hike in fees, fell by 11.2%, while Ucas reported a surge in students applying from outside the EU. The 13.7% rise in foreign students applying, particularly from the Far East, inflated the overall figures.

But Sarah Spencer, academic director of the distance learning centre Oxford College, called the drop "sudden and severe".

"While last year's numbers were boosted by prospective students rushing to start their courses before the fees increase, this year's data shows demand - warts and all.

"And it's not a pretty picture. With many universities now charging £9000 a year for tuition, the cost is clearly scaring off many would-be students.

"It's years since getting a degree was any sort of guarantee of getting a good job. Now university fees are so high that a three-year degree course is increasingly looking like an expensive gamble.

Spencer added distance learning courses are becoming increasingly popular as students feel the applied courses will provide a faster, cheaper access to a degree.

"As even the ivory towers of academia are buffeted by the chill economic winds, students' fears about cost and the anaemic jobs market are combining to change the shape of higher education."

There is also no increase in the figures to suggest those who would normally have applied aged 19 in 2012 applied aged 18 in 2011 instead.

Figures for 18-year-olds are particularly important as they have not yet had the chance to apply. In England, the numbers of first-time applicants have decreased by 1% this year, compared to an annual increase of 1% since 2006. Again, in other UK countries, Ucas reports "little change".

The 1994 Group of research universities has responded to the news that university applications have fallen by 7.4%.

Professor Michael Farthing, chairman of the organisation, said:

“The cuts to funding gave universities little option other than to increase fees and as a result many prospective students have obviously been wary of applying this year. The uncertainty caused by the Government’s haphazard approach to reform has not helped.

“But the fact remains that going to university is an excellent investment."

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10:02 AM on 02/02/2012
The "advantaged" areas contain the pathetic posers who live up to thir necks in debt so the additional cost of Nasty Nicks rip off is critical.
06:40 PM on 01/30/2012
Go and look for any job. They ask for experience. Why go and get a degree? When it comes to the IT world much value is placed on certification from various places such as Microsoft. Universities do not offer this as a standard part of their courses. Universities in the UK are not fit for purpose.
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
05:24 PM on 01/30/2012
I have two kids just starting out in the world. I think the way our generation is treating them is shameful. Over 1m unemployed young and rising, a lack of apprenticeships or alternative training, penalising those that want to get qualifications to better themselves by at least 45 grand in debt, making it impossible for them to get on the housing ladder, etc etc. Then you get fools demonising numbers of youngsters in the media as feckless, criminal rioting scum. God this country is the pits for everyone - except for the top 5% who own 50% of the wealth.
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pst2868
Karma is sweet
05:13 PM on 01/30/2012
£9000 is relatively inexpensive compared to what they have to pay in the US. And the people in the Far-East values a university degree from The UK or the US far more than a degree from their own countries.
06:37 PM on 01/30/2012
Every man and his dog has a degree in the UK. They aren't worth the paper they are printed on.
01:28 PM on 01/31/2012
Every man and his dog has a string of A*s at A level in the UK. They aren't worth the paper they are printed on.
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Victor Saymong
Canuck up Toronto way
05:10 PM on 01/30/2012
The wealthy are not applying? They are the only ones who can AFFORD to go back to university now.
03:52 PM on 01/30/2012
Well, as about 30% get turned away with no places in a normal year, this will mean fewer disappointed youth, won't it?
02:50 PM on 01/30/2012
Good to see Distance Learning growing - it is the future of Higher Education and is much more student friendly and time and cost effective
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11:05 PM on 01/30/2012
hello ronnie,
I agree with you 100%. Institutions such as the O.U. are worth every last penny that is spent on it, from whatever source. For many people of middle age, gaining an OU degree opens up a new world of opportunity. The trend recently, I believe, is that the OU is gaining more and more students of what we regard as the normal "student years," from 18 into early twenties. It's not a soft option on any level.
I've seen and participated in some other distance learning forms and the striking thing I noticed from some of them was how pragmatic the teaching was.
12:50 PM on 01/30/2012
"while Ucas reported a surge in students applying from outside the EU. The 13.7% rise in foreign students applying, particularly from the Far East"
12:41 PM on 01/30/2012
I am now awaiting the crime stats, which will probably show a 10% increase, but which will be dismissed as a 'seasonal' glitch due to better reporting and recording.

As though!