Scottish National Party MPs have been urged to use their power at Westminster on higher education, in favour of a 鈥減rogressive鈥 stance on issues such as student maintenance grants and overseas students.
A fringe event at the SNP鈥檚 conference in Aberdeen also heard Carol Monaghan, the party鈥檚 spokeswoman on education at Westminster, describe how she had been 鈥渞iled鈥 when Jo Johnson, the universities and science minister, supposedly cited the universities of Oxford and Cambridge when talking about examples of research excellence.
Speakers at the event on 16 October 鈥 hosted by Million+, the National Union of Students and NUS Scotland and titled 鈥楬ow will the SNP stand up for higher education in Westminster and Holyrood?鈥 鈥 noted that despite higher education being a devolved matter, England-only student funding issues had knock-on effects for Scottish funding under the Barnett formula.
The SNP has 56 MPs at Westminster.
Megan Dunn, the NUS president, said of the Westminster government鈥檚 plan to scrap student maintenance grants in England: 鈥淭he Barnett consequences are huge 鈥 it could be as much as 拢300 million taken out of the Scottish budget because of it.鈥
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She called on SNP MPs to oppose and challenge 鈥渨hen regulations [on the maintenance changes] are at some point placed down鈥, because 鈥渢hese votes will be close鈥e desperately need the support鈥.
In Scotland, the SNP has shifted maintenance grant into loans, although not abolished grants.
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Ms Dunn also said: 鈥淔ree education in Scotland has opened up an opportunity to make a more credible argument south of the border.鈥
And she added that the NUS wants to 鈥渨ork closely with the SNP to make sure the changes that happen in higher education over the next five years are as progressive as possible鈥.
Michael Gunn, vice-chancellor of Staffordshire University and former chair of Million+, said that 鈥渨e need SNP MPs to take a strong interest in the forthcoming higher education Green Paper and also to question the wider impact of the 糖心Vlog Office鈥檚 visa policy for international students鈥, in areas going beyond post-study work visas, which the SNP has said should be restored.
Ms Monaghan, a member of the Business, Innovation and Skills select committee at Westminster, recalled a recent hearing at which Mr Johnson was questioned on the research budget.
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鈥淗e鈥檚 very pro-science, he鈥檚 very pro-universities,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut there is a concern that the rhetoric may not match the actions when the spending review comes out.鈥
Ms Monaghan added that Mr Johnson had 鈥渢alked about funding centres of excellence. When he said this, he then mentioned Oxford, Cambridge and Imperial. That, of course, riled me and probably an awful lot of other people in the room 鈥 across the rest of the UK, not just Scottish people.鈥
She called this 鈥渁 very narrow-minded view and I worry about that鈥.
On the loss of post-study work visas, Ms Monaghan, said that it meant overseas graduates leaving Scotland and 鈥渓ost expertise that we鈥檝e provided them鈥. As a result, she added, innovations would be 鈥渄eveloped somewhere else 鈥 that鈥檚 a massive loss鈥.
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Andrea Nolan, the Edinburgh Napier University vice-chancellor, also warned that 鈥渢he trajectory of UK immigration policy is a real threat鈥.
Vonnie Sandlan, NUS Scotland president, addressed the issue of student support in Scotland. 鈥淲e speak about having free education in Scotland and we do, but only when it comes to the price tag,鈥 she said. Ms Sandlan added there was a 鈥渘eed to look at the wider costs of being a student鈥.
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