Title: Implementing the HEFCE guidance: Achieving Targeting Targets Chris Carpenter
1Implementing the HEFCE guidance Achieving
Targeting Targets?Chris Carpenter Mike Kerrigan
- Aimhigher National Conference7th October 2009
2Workshop structure
- Brief presentation
- Your questions
- Discussion groups
- Summary and close
3HEFCE Targeting Guidance (2007)
- Stage 1 Area level targeting
- e.g. particular schools/colleges, communities
- Stage 2 Learner level targeting
- Stage 3 Monitoring the effectiveness of
targeting - IMD 67 of participants
- NS-SEC 4-8 67 of participants
4Stage one Area Level
- HEFCE Targeting Guidance
- Identify schools, colleges and communities where
disadvantage is concentrated, and where resources
should be directed - Our approach
- IMD Maps to indicate deprived communities and for
context - School/college profiles
5Example IMD MapsBassetlaw District and
Nottingham City
6Example School profile(simplified version)
- Assists partnerships in identifying target /
priority schools - IMD, HE participation (POLAR2 qYPR) and FSM
identified as key targeting criteria - Combines PLASC pupil data (aggregated at LSOA
level) for each school with IMD and POLAR2 area
indicators - Full version incorporates IDACI and EST
7Stage 2 Learner Level
- HEFCE Targeting Guidance
- Most intensive interventions (equivalent to
Cat2?) e.g. mentoring, master classes, summer
schools - Make judgements as to which learners (from
disadvantaged backgrounds) will benefit most from
provision - Our approach
- Postcodes database
- LA support to identify cohorts
8Identifying cohorts
- Developed using LA data and with their support
- Some criteria used
- IMD (40 most deprived)
- FSM
- POLAR2
- Disability
- Care background
- PLUS potential to progress to HE
- Cohorts distributed to individual schools
- Teacher judgement often used to refine
9Stage three Monitoring theeffectiveness of
targeting procedures
- HEFCE Targeting Guidance
- Collection of key data NS-SEC, IMD, parental HE
experience - Improved targeting depends on improved monitoring
- 67 participants from 40 most deprived areas
- 67 participants from NS-SEC 4-8
- Our approach
- Collection of participant data
- Monitoring Evaluation Database
10Collecting and using data
- Consent forms / application forms
- Permission to use for monitoring evaluation
- Entered onto AhEM Monitoring Evaluation
Database - Data collected includes (amongst others)
- Postcode (for IMD POLAR2)
- Occupation (for NS-SEC)
- Parental experience of HE
- Enables detailed reports for monitoring
effectiveness of targeting
11Coding occupations for NS-SEC
- Single open question method
- What is the occupation of the highest earning
parent/carer currently living in the household? - Input by areas into ME database and extracted by
AhEM for coding centrally (giving consistency) - New occupations coded manually using ONS listing
as a guide - Occupations added to a lookup once coded to
automatically code future occurrences - Around 60-70 of occupations now automatically
coded by lookup - this figure is continually
increasing
12Results summary
- Improvements across all indicators, although
still missing HEFCE targets
13Taking populations into account
Categories broken down into deciles A 10 most
deprived J 10 least deprived
14AhEM Collective IMD
15AhEM Collective NS-SEC
16AhEM Collective POLAR2 qYPR
17Monitoring school/college targeting
- Allows partnerships to identifying which
schools/colleges are selecting appropriate
learners to participate in Aimhigher activity
18Your questions
19Discussion groups
- Problems in implementing targeting procedures.
Any solutions? -
- Issues with using FFT (potential to succeed) data
in identifying cohorts - Monitoring of targeting Cohort data vs.
Participant data - Are Category 1 and Category 2 classifications of
any use?
20Thanks for your time!
- Chris Carpenter
- c.j.carpenter_at_lboro.ac.uk / 01509 223462
- Mike Kerrigan
- m.d.kerrigan_at_lboro.ac.uk / 01509 223460