Title: Challenges and opportunities in higher education
1Challenges and opportunities in higher education
- Sir Howard Newby
- Chief Executive
- HEFCE annual meeting
- Friday 23 November 2001
- BAFTA
2HE achievements
- participation of young people has doubled
- UK has one of the highest student completion
rates in the world - UK has one of highest proportions of graduates in
the world - UK graduates among the most valued in the world
- UK research among best in the world
3Student non-completion
- 18 per cent, compared to 16 per cent in 1985-86
- meanwhile participation has more than doubled,
and the student profile has changed immensely - This compares with
- The range in the UK is from 1 to 36
- Our worst is better than most countries average
- International Comparators from OECD Education
at a Glance
4Our research is among the best in the world
5The Dearing compact
- lifelong learning
- regional economic regeneration
- creation of the learning society
- scholarship and pure research
- technological innovation
- social cohesion
- public accountability
6Principles for the development of the sector
- in an increasingly global environment the quality
of everything that each institution does needs to
be world class - differentiation of roles is a key to the future
- each institution needs to identify what it can do
well and then to concentrate on doing that
7The role of HEFCE (1)
- remove perverse incentives for institutions to do
things they do not do well - provide positive incentives for institutions to
do the things they are good at - create a number of different funding streams
8The role of HEFCE (2)
- Working in partnership we help to match the
aspirations and development of higher education
to the needs of students, the economy and society
9The change agenda
Needs of students, the economy and society
- Aspirations and development of HE
The changeagenda
10The change agenda
- one size will not fit all
- institutions will increasingly cooperate
- complementary strengths
- differentiation of function
- HEFCE should help willing partners grow closer
- meeting regional needs
11Possible different funding streams
- Research
- partly responsible for mission drift
- Teaching
- not as a mission and funding differentiator all
institutions should do it well - Widening participation
- not as a mission differentiator that would let
some institutions off the hook. But funding for
WP needs to be adequate - 3rd stream
- possibly, but it will need to be instead of, not
as well as, research as a funding stream
12Participation in full-time education by 16-21
year olds
13The big partnership
- to achieve the Governments widening
participation target - meeting the target will address social equity and
national competitiveness issues - by strengthening networks of HEIs, FECs, schools
and other partners in every region - close collaboration between HEFCE and the
Learning and Skills Council
14Lessons
- we must widen the group of those benefiting from
HE - widening participation depends on success in
schools - we have to help mature students enter HE and
succeed - ensuring students succeed is as important as
bringing them in
15Challenges and opportunities in higher education
- Sir Howard Newby
- Chief Executive
- HEFCE annual meeting
- Friday 23 November 2001
- BAFTA
16Annual meeting 23 November 2001
- Steve Egan
- Director of Finance Corporate Resources
17Issues
- Framework leadership management
- HR strategies better accountability
- performance
18Framework
Funding
Supporting change
Respecting autonomy
Better accountability
Supporting capability development
Spreading best practice
19Supporting capability development
Existing initiatives
UCEA guide
Seminars
HR strategies
Good practice seminars
Consultancy
HR strategies
20Longer-term issues
UCEA principles of job evaluation
Benchmarking
National developments
UUK/SCOP leadership management
Equality challenge
Rewarding developing staff phase 2
21Better accountability
- Conditional allocations
- QAA
- Working with others
- Better regulation task force
22 performance
- ? Targets
- ? Costs
- ? Improvements
23Improvements
- EFQM excellence model
- Enabler framework
- Pay system
- Board self-assessment
- Strategic plan
24Steve Egan
- Director of Finance and Corporate Resources
25- Stephen Marston
- Director for Institutions
26- To cover three illustrations of partnership
- formation of the e-University
- developments in quality assurance in higher
education - the Big Partnership for widening participation
27(No Transcript)
28e-University corporate organisation
29Progress during the year
- January invitation to private sector partners
- March invitation to HEIs to propose programmes
- June incorporation of Holding Company
- October
- strategic partnership with Sun Microsystems to
develop platform - incorporation of Operating Company
- first fast-track pilot programmes
30Next steps
- Appointment of chair and chief executive
- Continue to build partnership
- Platform development with Sun
- Commission further round of learning programmes
31Quality assurance
- Previous consultation assumed continuation of
universal subject review - Concerns about accountability burden
- Proposal in March to introduce sampling
- Prompted more fundamental re-think of purposes
and how to achieve them - HEFCE, QAA, Universities UK and SCOP developed
proposals published in July
32QAA results
33 July proposals
- Based on analogy with audit
- Main responsibility for quality and standards
rests with each HEI - Institution-wide audit of internal procedures for
safeguarding quality and standards - Integrated sampling to check that procedures are
working and published report - Follow up reviews in areas of concern
34Information about quality and standards
- What information do stakeholders need?
- Wide array of information already available
inside institutions from internal processes - What information should every HEI be expected to
have? - What parts of that information should be
published? - Institutional audit to review its reliability
35Quality assurance next steps
- Analysis of responses to July consultation
proposals - Joint statement on where next
- Consultation on information needs
- Consultation on how to put the model into
operation - Implementation 2002-03
36November horoscope (Scorpio)
- Since you can only imagine how strongly others
feel, say nothing that might add insult to
injury. It will be easy to make what you think
are harmless comments and cause untold problems.
Its a pity if your thoughts are considered so
insulting that the whole thing is made worse.
Its time to tread carefully.
37Widening participation Big Partnership
- Government target of 50 participation between
ages of 18 and 30 by 2010 - Current trends in student demand
- Need to strengthen the supply chain into HE
- HEIs working more closely with FE colleges and
schools to raise attainment and motivation
38Participation in higher education by educational
attainment at 16
39Participation in higher education by social class
40Principles of Big Partnership
- Joint with Learning and Skills Council
- Build on what is already there, including WP
strategies and collaborative projects - Regional focus
- Stronger infrastructure of links between HEIs,
FECs and schools - Activities such as summer schools, student/ staff
mentoring, curriculum enrichment
41Stephen Marston
- Director for Institutions
42Bahram Bekhradnia
43Growth 1984-1994
44Growth in HE numbers 1995-2000
Source HESES data
45Number of students by mode of study and type of
institution 1983-84 to 1993-94
46Number of students by mode of study and type of
institution 1996-97 to 2000-01
47Institutions grouped by their percentage growth
in full-time students
48Age Participation Index
49Participation in FT Education by 16-21 year olds
50Proportion of age group gaining qualifications
5116 Progress towards post-16 national learning
targets for young people
52English population by age
53Number of Mature students in HE 1984-93
54Number of mature students in HE 1996-2000
55Drop Out and Previous Educational Experience (2)
56Implications for HEFCE
- Should we plan the system to a greater extent?
- Or should we allow the market freer reign?
- In particular, should we protect those
institutions most active in widening
participation? - In any case we - and institutions - need to
consider how HE can work in partnership with
schools and FE to increase numbers
57Bahram Bekhradnia