European Universities to be Part of UK Admissions
European Universities to be Part of UK Admissions
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European Universities to be Part of UK Admissions |
British sixth-formers will be able to apply to
continental European universities through the UK admissions system for the
first time, under a landmark reform that will transform the higher education
market, the Guardian can reveal.
The change, promoted by the Universities and
Colleges Admissions Service (Ucas) as extending student choice and reflecting
the increasingly globalised nature of higher education, is likely to accelerate
the steady increase in the number of young Britons studying abroad. The trend
has already been boosted by a boom in the number of courses taught entirely in
English by continental universities and priced well below the maximum
£9,000-a-year annual UK tuition fee or, in some countries, with no fee at all.
Students due to leave school this summer will
have the option of applying to a handful of European universities via Ucas
after it reversed its opposition, providing the universities meet equivalent
quality standards to the UK.
Maastricht University is planning to use Ucas
mailings this summer to target students with information about its courses.
Other continental universities have also held discussions with Ucas and are
expected to follow suit.
The reform will also put pressure on the
government to extend tuition fee loans, currently available to English and
Welsh students only for courses in British universities, to courses taught
overseas. Scottish students already have this option: under a two-year
“portability pilot” scheme launched this academic year, they can claim grants,
bursaries and tuition fee loans for study at five approved continental
universities.
Denying students access to portable tuition
loans risks shutting poorer students off from overseas study, according to
Peter Lampl, chairman of education charity The Sutton Trust. He said: “There’s
no doubt that overseas study holds real benefits and is a realistic option. The
problem is that many young people, particularly those from low- and middle-income
families, just don’t consider it as a feasible choice for them.
“More must be done to ensure that all
teenagers are aware of their options and given the best possible advice. US
students can access US government grants and loans for study abroad and our
government should accord British students the same rights.”
Latest Ucas figures show British universities
– many ranking among the best in the world – are far from threatened by the
rise in British students heading abroad, mainly to the US but also to
continental institutions, primarily in Holland. Despite fears that the
introduction of £9,000 fees in 2012 would see a fall in applications, more than
half a million British and European Union students – a record – took up a place
at a UK university this academic year, while only about 30,000 left Britain to
study.
However, while British students have always
been able to apply to foreign universities directly alongside their domestic
Ucas applications, and will still be able to do so, a shift to include approved
continental universities on the Ucas form will greatly raise the profile of
overseas study as a viable option. Dutch universities such as Maastricht and
Groningen, already with about 400 British undergraduates and masters students
apiece, charge £1,500 a year in tuition fees and boast of more contact time
than equivalent UK courses. Their application deadlines are later than British
universities, so they can still accept UK applicants for study this autumn.
Ucas said its decision to open its service to
approved overseas universities – who must pay a joining fee understood to be as
much as £25,000 – reflected new trends in higher education. A spokesperson
said: “We will … consider requests from European higher education providers to
use Ucas services if they can demonstrate that they meet equivalent standards
to those in the UK. The inclusion of a wider range of higher education
providers in the Ucas system offers students more choice about where and what
to study.”
A spokesperson for Groningen University, which
has 23 undergraduate programmes taught in English and is 90th in global
rankings, said the university was in the process of giving evidence of its
accredited status and financial stability to Ucas. If approved as expected it
would be on the admission service’s lists of institutions by the summer.
David Willetts, former coalition universities
minister and a vocal supporter of overseas study as beneficial to the future
economy, said he “warmly welcomed this opening up of the system”. Rejecting
fears of a brain drain from the UK, he echoed calls for portable loans to
ensure students could access continental courses.
Michael Geary, chair of Maastricht’s student
recruitment team, said the university was unlikely to apply to be a full Ucas
member university for the time being but was planning to use the service to
advertise its courses directly to potential applicants. “We are facing more and
more competition from American and European universities and we can’t rest on
our laurels,” he said.
Martin Paul, Maastricht University president,
said European higher education institutions gained mutual benefit from movement
of students as well as partnering and exchange schemes. He said: “We are rather
thinking of brain circulation, not brain drain.”
He said: “The decision to have higher tuition
fees was some sort of wake-up call in the UK where students and their parents
began to think what is on the other side of the sea.”
Visiting Maastricht from Sevenoaks on an
undergraduate open day this month, Alec Denniff, 17, confirmed his decision to
make Maastricht his first choice above his five UK university offers to study
European law next autumn. Lower fees were not the main attraction, he said. “I
like travel and when it comes to employment I think living in a different
culture will help make my application stand out more,” he said.
His mother, Alison, a single parent who works
in a school kitchen, said she would try to help Alec finance his studies, since
he would not be eligible for a loan. She said: “My daughter is at Exeter where
she’s paying £9,000 a year and when you compare that with the Dutch fees it’s
an incredible saving.”
British students are becoming increasingly
comfortable with the idea of overseas study, according to Guy Flouch of
European university applications support service Eunicas. Just under 1,000
courses are now taught exclusively in English in continental universities,
Eunicas calculates, with Dutch universities the biggest providers.
Numbers have grown fastest in medical courses,
where extreme competition for UK university places has led some applicants to
look overseas. Martin Hyde, of study abroad agency The Student World, said his
service had placed more than 300 British students to study medicine in
Bulgaria, where they can access Bulgarian government-backed loans.
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