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Universities turn away record number of students

10 August 2010 974 views 2 Comments

Clearing 2010: university-of-warwick-006
Jessica Sheppard Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2010/aug/09/universities-clearing-turn-away-students

All courses full at Birmingham, Bristol, Edinburgh and Warwick nine days before A-level results, Guardian poll finds Clearing will be ‘even briefer and tighter than last year’. Several universities, including Warwick, have announced their courses are already full nine days before A-level results arrive. Record numbers of A-level students are being turned away from the country’s leading universities, it emerged today, as institutions declared themselves full more than a week before the clearing system, which allocates last-minute places, opens. A Guardian poll of 38 universities reveals that increasing demand for degree courses – up 11.6% this year – intensified by the recession and a cut in available places means that nine days ahead of A-level results, even some of the brightest teenagers in the country, predicted to achieve more than 90% in their exams, are failing to secure a university place.Birmingham, Bristol, Edinburgh and Warwick already have no places left on any of their courses. The London School of Economics and St Andrews said they would have to turn down students who narrowly missed the offers they received from other universities. Oxford and Cambridge, in line with previous years, will have no places left.Last year almost 48,000 students found a university place through clearing – when institutions that have spare spaces match-make students who have not made their offers for other universities or apply late.But the university admissions service Ucas said the number of places in clearing this year will be “even briefer and tighter than last year”.Admissions tutors predict that clearing places vanish within two to three days of A-level results. University leaders predict that as many as 170,000 students could find themselves left without a place on a degree course. Last year the figure was 130,000.The intense competition for places has forced institutions such as Warwick, Cambridge and the London School of Economics (LSE) to turn down even students predicted to get an A*, the new grade introduced this year which was meant to enable universities to pick out the brightest students. Students need to achieve a mark of 90% or more to obtain the grade. The LSE said pressure on places made it “inevitable” that pupils who were predicted at least one A* would be turned down. Warwick and Nottingham universities said it was even possible that a student with a clutch of A* predictions could still be turned down.Cambridge has said it may have rejected up to 8,000 applicants expected to achieve at least one A*. The university is considering raising its minimum entry requirements from one to two A* grades in two or three years. The Guardian’s poll reveals that some universities will only offer students a place in clearing if they have three As. Manchester University said it would have 50 places in clearing, but those in humanities would need to be straight-A students.A spokeswoman for the vice-chancellors’ umbrella group Universities UK said increased pressure on places would lead to a “challenging time for everyone”.”It is anticipated that the clearing process for this summer will be briefer and tighter than in previous years. However, universities are very experienced in handling high numbers of applications and they have been preparing for this peak time for many months now along with Ucas.”

Parentsoutlout are interested in hearing if your family have an issue with finding a place and what will happen if it has to be a gap year will students find some work or do volunteer work? How will the interest in learning and training be sustained?

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2 Comments »

  • Charlotte said:

    Students that do not get into University should not sit back and just drift into a gap year. There are still lots of students left from last year looking for jobs. Now is the time to invest in real skills development. Plan a sensible course of action, e.g. doing accountancy training; or doing sales and marketing training; or studying a personnel qualification; learning a new language; doing some original research – start creating a good skills portfolio. Bright students now work in and compete in a global market place. There are no jobs for life left, we all have to take responsibility for our own personal development…..it is a really exciting opportunity China, Brazil, Russia, India and so on all have fast economic growth and great opportunities for resourceful young people. Carpe Diem! Seize the day, th e UK is a hub of global business blessed by a fairly predictable temperate climate, and politics and economy that are business friendly. The future has lots of promise young people need to think outside the box and make their own future. University is for a lot of youngsters a very expensive choice which they go into blindly and so don’t make the best use of their time there.

  • claire said:

    I totally agree with Charlotte! University really is not the only option and there are so many options out there nowadays. The world is changing and is a different place to just a few years ago. Young people really do have everything ahead of them and should consider all their options, gap years, work experience, university; but what about vocational training?

    Having a vocation or trade can lead to so many possibilities. The London College of Beauty Therapy (www.lcbt.co.uk) is a specialist college (obviously in the beauty industry, but there are many colleges which focus specifically on vocational qualifications) has a range of qualifications and short courses. It’s worth while checking out all the other options you have available to you. University is not the be all and end all.

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