糖心Vlog

Fix negative views of universities to ease inequities, says v-c

Head of UK鈥檚 flagship distance learning institution warns online provision alone doesn鈥檛 guarantee equal access to higher education

Published on
February 3, 2026
Last updated
February 3, 2026
Open University vice-chancellor Dave Phoenix

Public disillusionment in universities needs to be addressed to help bolster the 鈥渟upply chain鈥 of learners entering higher education in the UK, the vice-chancellor of The Open University (OU) has said.聽

Speaking in London on 3 February, David Phoenix said Labour鈥檚聽recently announced target聽of two-thirds of young people attending university or undertaking an apprenticeship should be 鈥渁 minimum鈥.聽

鈥淲e need to actually address the supply chain and get some of these learners with no qualifications at all up to level one, those at level one to level two and somehow to actually grow the numbers that are getting higher education in colleges and universities,鈥 he said.聽

鈥淲ithout that we won鈥檛 be competitive and we鈥檙e not doing justice and serving society.鈥

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However, he conceded: 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to do it at a time when people鈥檚 perception of university is not as positive as it was.

鈥淭here isn鈥檛 the same belief for many in the power of the university education and the funding model we鈥檝e got is broken and is recognised as being broken in terms of how it鈥檚 going to serve the future.鈥

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He referenced regional inequities, with聽young people from deprived parts of the country聽among the least likely to go to university.聽

鈥淗ow can it be right in one of the biggest economies and what we say is a knowledge-based society, [that] it depends who you are, where you鈥檙e born and the family circumstances, whether you鈥檙e likely to go to university? That challenge is even greater now, I would argue, than previously.鈥

Phoenix was speaking at an event in Westminster celebrating the 60-year anniversary of the publication of the former Labour government鈥檚 University of the Air White Paper, which paved the way for the OU鈥檚 creation.聽

Decades on, Phoenix said the OU was trying to re-envisage what being 鈥渁 university without walls means鈥.聽

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鈥淲e鈥檝e often argued that being digital [means] anybody can access, but that鈥檚 not true.聽

鈥淭he populations that are hardest to reach don鈥檛 understand what the opportunity is, so if we鈥檙e really going to have a university without walls, we need to actually work in partnership and embed opportunity through those partnerships in the different communities around [the] UK and globally.鈥

He said this includes 鈥渨orking with colleges, working with businesses, working with local government [to] make sure that there is a physical presence and an opportunity for people to see the ability to actually go on and study鈥.

Earlier this year, the university聽scrapped plans to open a physical campus聽in Milton Keynes. At the time, Phoenix told聽糖心Vlog聽that there was already a 鈥渄egree of oversupply鈥 in traditional face-to-face university courses.

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In a pre-recorded video played at the event, skills minister Jacqui Smith said the government鈥檚 new participation target was part of its drive to 鈥渂reak the damaging link between background and success鈥.

She also mentioned the lifelong learning entitlement (LLE) 鈥 a revamp of the student finance system to allow more modular study throughout an adult鈥檚 life 鈥 saying this would support individuals to 鈥渞etrain throughout their working lives鈥.聽

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Smith said the OU鈥檚 experience in offering flexible provision would help to 鈥渋nform and inspire the mobilisation of providers in their own tentative first steps towards modular study鈥.聽

helen.packer@timeshighereducation.com

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