Source: Elly Walton
Why should the university fund the newspapers鈥 information-getting exercise? The entire cost of such an exercise is placed on institutions
If we win the election,鈥 a younger looking, tie-less David Cameron told a trendy TED conference three years ago, 鈥渨e are going to make all spending over 拢25,000 transparent and available online and searchable for anyone to see.鈥
The future prime minister guaranteed a slew of data to allow citizens to discover the risk of infection in the local hospital or how likely they were to be mugged when popping to the shops. This information would empower people to improve their public services by holding organisations to account, Cameron argued. If there was a moment when the open data movement - and its cousin, the transparency agenda - went mainstream in the UK, this was it.
- the central repository for state information set up in January 2010 - now hosts 9,248 datasets, with the number rising steadily. It is open to debate how useful this avalanche of information has actually been, but the idea that the public should be able to look inside the institutions they help to fund - to see how they work and what they spend - is now close to an orthodoxy.
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The UK鈥檚 move towards open access has focused attention on the issue of public access to research findings in recent months - but what about other areas of a university鈥檚 business? How open are our universities? And how open should they be?
Openness takes many forms, of course. One of the best-known measures to increase the transparency of public bodies is the Freedom of Information Act 2000.
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In his 2010 memoir, A Journey, Tony Blair called himself a 鈥渘aive, foolish, irresponsible nincompoop鈥 for bringing in the right to request information from public bodies - fearing that such accessibility would hinder frank discussion - but the Act has become a fact of life for public institutions, if not always a welcome one.
FoI requests allow anyone to seek information held by the government and public authorities. It has been estimated that universities spend about 拢7.2 million a year to employ FoI officers and a further 拢2.3 million to answer requests, according to Jisc research released last year. Although these figures overlap to some extent, taken together, they constitute 0.36 per cent of the sector鈥檚 expenditure in 2011-12, a sum that Universities UK describes as 鈥渃onsiderable鈥.
Paul Gibbons, an FoI officer at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London who blogs about the subject, is clear about how FoI requests are viewed by those running universities: his personal view is that they are seen 鈥渁s a pain in the backside鈥. Although FoI officers themselves are generally keen to help, he argues, 鈥渢he issue is trying to get the rest of the institution to keep up鈥.
With universities increasingly relying on funding from private sources, some believe that the burden placed on universities by the Act is unfair and unsustainable. 鈥淎s funding of the sector changes, and a greater proportion of university income comes from non-governmental sources, it is even more arguable whether universities are truly public authorities and whether the Act should therefore apply to them,鈥 the University of Essex told MPs on the Commons Justice Committee when they audited the Act last year.
Figures from the 糖心Vlog Statistics Agency suggest that in 2011- 12, about 45 per cent of university income came from what could be described as private sources such as student tuition fees, charity- and industry-funded research, and catering services.
Most of the institutions that gave evidence to the Justice Committee voiced concerns about the cost of fulfilling FoI requests. Ferdinand von Prondzynski, principal of Robert Gordon University, thinks universities should be allowed to charge for them. Many requests are from potential suppliers looking for a 鈥渓eg-up in a commercial context鈥, he says. As for those from journalists, he asks: 鈥淲hy should the university fund the newspapers鈥 information-getting exercise?鈥 He stresses that he is not opposed to the principle of FoI, however. 鈥淲hat is bugging me is that the entire cost of such an exercise is placed on institutions who receive no money for it.鈥
Universities can be unforthcoming for different reasons. In response to recent FoI requests submitted by 糖心Vlog, a number of universities have refused to divulge information because they say it could harm their commercial interests - an exemption permitted by the Act. One THE request prompted this round-robin message from Staffordshire University to other FoI officers: 鈥淚 have been asked by my student office if we can refuse this using this [commercial interests] exemption, I can鈥檛 see how we could - any thoughts?鈥
With the government pushing the idea of greater competition between institutions, we can expect this exemption to be wheeled out more frequently in the future, Gibbons predicts. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something that may well happen because the government鈥檚 got this agenda to make us more commercial.鈥
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But FoI requests do not always cost the sector money - they can do the opposite. Gibbons once received a request for Soas鈥 directors鈥 expenses. When these were examined, it was realised that more of the costs could have been covered by outside organisations, saving the institution about 拢9,000. The value of FoI requests is in their unpredictability, he says, which makes them 鈥渁 useful check on things that you haven鈥檛 thought to have audited鈥.
Indeed, one key promise of open data, say advocates, is that it can reveal inefficiencies and even injustices that public bodies are unaware of. Outside higher education, Martin Hall, vice-chancellor of the University of Salford, points to research carried out last year by the non-profit Open Data Institute that analysed publicly available data to find that GPs were needlessly prescribing branded drugs rather than their equally effective, cheaper, generic alternatives, squandering billions of pounds in the process.
Are universities transparent about how their senior management make decisions? Most publish minutes of their governing council and senate meetings online (although some are hard to find) roughly three months after the event. 鈥淲e publish our council minutes. How many companies publish their board minutes?鈥 asks Hall.
But as with FoI, the rough and tumble of competition appears to be having a chilling effect on transparency. The board of governors at troubled London Metropolitan University decided in January to withhold its minutes for a year after each meeting because it needed a 鈥渟afe space鈥 to discuss tricky issues, 鈥渆specially in these turbulent times鈥, although this decision is being reviewed at the time of writing.
Governing council minutes may be a red herring anyway, von Prondzynski thinks. Decisions in universities are 鈥渢aken informally by a small group of people鈥 around the vice-chancellor, who then get the council to 鈥渞ubber-stamp鈥 their decisions, he says.
These small groups - sometimes called the executive board or university executive committee - do not make public the minutes of their meetings. They should do, von Prondzynski argues, otherwise you end up with decisions 鈥渢hat nobody gets to review or understand鈥.

Small groups around the leader rarely make public their minutes. 鈥榊ou can鈥檛 carry on the business of your executive advisory boards in the public domain鈥
Hall disagrees. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 carry on the business of your executive advisory boards in the public domain.鈥
Universities also have important subcommittees, covering, for example, research or ethics policy, that feed their deliberations up to the governing council. Public minutes for these bodies are a rarity.
鈥淲hat I have detected is that around the university system there鈥檚 often an assumption that unless something is explicitly made public, it should be confidential,鈥 von Prondzynski complains. 鈥淚f in doubt, publish,鈥 he urges.
He is also of the opinion that a lot of information is 鈥渧ery effectively hidden on university websites鈥, although he attributes this more to 鈥渁ppalling鈥 website design than to a desire for secrecy. 鈥淓ase of access is as important as fact of access,鈥 he believes.
The University and College Union, meanwhile, argues that the transparency of decision-making is threatened by the erosion of staff representation and of the role of senates and academic boards. 鈥淲e need proper scrutiny of decisions from academics and others prepared to ask the difficult questions,鈥 says Sally Hunt, the union鈥檚 general secretary.
Nowhere is public scrutiny of senior management more intense than over executive salaries and bonuses. How transparent are universities about these?
Details of vice-chancellors鈥 pay and pension packages are published in university accounts annually. However, von Prondzynski argues in his 2012 report into Scottish university governance, Report of the Review of 糖心Vlog Governance in Scotland, that baffling university accounts can make it difficult to discern whether an institution鈥檚 head is receiving a bonus. Universities should get out of the bonus business altogether, he contends, lest they be tarred with the same brush as profligate bankers.
A number of universities awarded their heads performance-related pay in 2011-12, including Birmingham (拢32,000), Exeter (拢54,000), Salford (拢18,100) and Aston (拢20,000, of which 拢10,000 was subsequently waived at the request of the vice-chancellor). The reasons for the extra sums are not explained in the financial statements, but Aston University and Salford told THE that they were rewards for the principal achieving various undisclosed targets and objectives.
Banks, in contrast, dish out vastly bigger bonuses, but they have to say exactly how much they award and why. Barclays filled 12 pages with dense text and tables justifying its 拢2.15 billion bonus pool in its 2011 accounts, for example.
The NHS, meanwhile, has recently come under fire for paying off whistleblowers in deals that include gagging clauses preventing them taking their concerns public, and the government has promised to clamp down on this. Does the sector indulge in similar silencing?
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According to the responses to a THE FoI request, in the three years to 2012, 73 universities signed 192 non-disclosure agreements with staff who had been bringing a case before an employment tribunal but settled before a full hearing.
Anyone who signs a compromise agreement as part of voluntary severance with the University of Edinburgh, for example, agrees 鈥渘ot to make any disparaging remarks in any circumstances鈥 about the university, although this is 鈥渟ubject always to the principles of academic freedom鈥.
If this all makes the sector sound rather opaque, registrars might beg to differ. Writing in THE last year, Simeon Underwood, academic registrar at the London School of Economics, bemoaned the 鈥渧ast鈥 quantity of information that institutions must collect for bodies such as Hesa.
The UK is unusual in that it has a dedicated statistics body for higher education rather than one for all forms of education, as is the case in the US. Hesa was created by the sector because the Further and 糖心Vlog Act 1992 demanded more data in order to work out exactly how to fund the UK鈥檚 new universities.
Since then, its data demands have grown. It now collects data on students (including gender, ethnicity, domicile, degree class, school background, socio-economic background, accommodation type), staff, finances, business and community interaction, graduate destinations and university estates.
And it is merely one of a multitude of bodies demanding information from the sector. A 2010 report for the 糖心Vlog Better Regulation Group unearthed 544 types of data institutions had to collect, for a host of different organisations (although some are needed only if a university runs a particular course or is in a specific part of the UK).
These data are of interest to politicians, the media, researchers and universities. 鈥淭hey can show how the student body changes over time, which students drop out, and so on. In time, they will provide the main evidence for whether the new tuition fees regime has or has not increased recruitment from disadvantaged socio-economic groups. But their cost and cost-effectiveness are rarely subject to scrutiny,鈥 Underwood argued, adding that the requirements can be fiendishly complicated.
In its 2011 White Paper, Students at the Heart of the System, the government promised to 鈥渆mpower prospective students by ensuring much better information on different courses鈥. Arguably, would-be students are now swimming in data about prospective universities.

Transparency is fine鈥︹檃s long as it is not confused with truth鈥nowledge of what is going on in any institution is not revealed by raw data鈥
Applicants have details on course costs, satisfaction rates, the proportion of time spent in lectures and average graduate wages at their fingertips following the introduction of the Key Information Sets and the launch of a revamped in September last year. Organisations such as Which? and have also got in on the act, using this information in websites aimed at students and their parents.
But there has been plenty of debate about how useful some of these data are. Writing in THE in 2011, Richard Partington, senior tutor at Churchill College, Cambridge, warned that information relating to student destinations, graduate-level employment and average salaries is 鈥渘otoriously difficult to gather and verify鈥 and that key details about teaching, such as class size, are missing from the KIS.
And researchers such as Graham Gibbs, professor of higher education at the University of Winchester, have warned that graduate earnings can be influenced by factors such as the reputation of the graduate鈥檚 institution and the individual鈥檚 school qualifications and social class, making them a poor indicator of quality.
Meanwhile, the holy grail of transparency - a breakdown of how an individual student鈥檚 tuition fees are spent - remains out of reach, at least for now.
In 2011, David Willetts, the universities and science minister, urged the sector to produce a pie chart for each course showing where students鈥 money was going. The 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England is currently considering whether to make public more detailed expenditure data on teaching, research and other areas as part of a consultation on the Transparent Approach to Costing (Trac). A spokeswoman for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills says: 鈥淪tudents should have clear information available on how their tuition fees are being spent. We have asked Hefce to look at this.鈥
This raises the question of how students might react to such information: what if undergraduates on business or humanities courses, for example, find that their tuition fees are subsidising research or the education of their friends on courses such as chemistry or engineering that are more expensive to run?
But breaking this down at course level would be difficult and would require even more form-filling by academics, Hefce says. More Trac paperwork would also conflict with the White Paper鈥檚 call to have the process 鈥渞adically streamlined鈥.
It is more likely that Hefce will release a spending breakdown by institution, although the funding council cautions that detail could be limited by competition law.
And in one key area, despite the wealth of information on Unistats, applicants have seen a reduction in the information available to them: this year, for the first time, the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service refused to publish a breakdown of the number of university applicants by institution after the main 15 January application deadline. Ucas says that revealing such data could change applicant behaviour in a way that is 鈥渘ot helpful in a fair and competitive application process鈥 and might conflict with competition law.
This worries Hall. 鈥淚t鈥檚 profoundly in the public interest to know these figures,鈥 he argues. 鈥淚t leaves us in a very bewildering situation.鈥 After all, he points out, universities will eventually have to reveal how many students they have attracted, so Ucas鈥 decision creates only a brief 鈥渁rtificial protection鈥 for struggling institutions.
And without knowing their rivals鈥 application data, universities cannot work together to save sinking subjects, he adds. Rather than sharing a department, 鈥渨e might all end up independently closing down Arabic in Greater Manchester because we didn鈥檛 talk to each other鈥, he speculates. 鈥淗ow can I have conversations if I don鈥檛 have the figures?鈥
In other areas some universities are making a point of opening up their data. In March 2011, the University of Southampton boldly promised to allow 鈥渢he app generation鈥 to 鈥渃reate the information they seek in the way that they want it鈥 by publishing raw data on its courses, procurement and estate online, ready to be turned into user-friendly web applications. Its approach has been widely praised, and so far staff and students at the university have created 15 apps from the data - five to do with buses, and one that compares the price of all food and drink available across the campus. Although no new app has been developed since 2011, a spokesman for the university says the institution is still 鈥渧ery active鈥 in the area.
So how do universities compare with other sectors? 鈥淚n terms of releasing open data and awareness about the benefits of sharing data openly, universities are generally lagging behind the public sector,鈥 says Jonathan Gray, director of policy and ideas at the Open Knowledge Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation advancing the open data cause.
On data.gov.uk, government departments publish spending data on transactions greater than 拢25,000, and many make public all spending over 拢500. Their management structures are laid bare, too: for example, you can browse the Student Loans Company to discover the names of the senior team, their salaries to the nearest 拢5,000, their responsibilities and who reports to them, right down to junior staff.
But UK universities - some of them, anyway - are queuing up to give away their teaching materials for free. Seventeen institutions have joined Futurelearn, the UK鈥檚 answer to US massive open online course (Mooc) providers such as Coursera, edX and Udacity. Details of the first Futurelearn courses are yet to be confirmed, but they should be open to students in the second half of 2013. While some argue that such courses can attract students to more conventional courses, others fear that it could undermine universities鈥 business models.
Should universities - as free-thinking and occasionally contrarian bodies - pay more heed to the current vogue for transparency? Transparency is fine, says Thomas Docherty, professor of English and comparative literature at the University of Warwick, 鈥渁s long as it is not confused with truth or even reliable knowledge. Knowledge of what is going on in any institution is not revealed by raw data.
鈥淭he demand for transparent data to operate as a kind of substitute for knowledge or truth is part of a culture of 鈥榠mmediacy鈥,鈥 he thinks, which is 鈥渁nathema to knowledge, and to education, both of which require time, delay, and the mediations of thinking.鈥
Overall, however, it is hard to avoid concluding that when it comes to being open and transparent about their internal business - particularly how universities function and why decisions are taken - the sector鈥檚 record is patchy. And the pressure to become more commercial, competitive organisations may make them only more tight-lipped.
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