糖心Vlog

Who should drive the engine of social mobility?

There will always be a political temptation to charge universities with improving a school system that leaves some students underprepared

Published on
August 4, 2022
Last updated
August 4, 2022
Boys playing on bus shelter on run down council estate; Bradford UK to illustrate social mobility
Source: Alamy

The extent to which higher education can be expected to single-handedly deliver equality of opportunity is a tricky issue for a sector that wants to be able to make an inspiring offer to would-be students but does not want to bear all the blame for the in social mobility. That is聽even more true when higher education participation is at historic highs and UK universities spend 拢250聽million a year on widening-access schemes. While some universities, particularly in less affluent areas, position themselves as 鈥渆ngines of social mobility鈥, more selective institutions protest that recruiting more students from poorer backgrounds would risk setting them up to fail due to problems in the school system.

But politicians are unconvinced that universities should be able to get off the hook so easily. Shortly after returning oversight of universities to the Department for Education upon becoming prime minister in 2016, Theresa May announced plans to force English universities to set up a school or sponsor an existing 鈥渦nderperforming鈥 one as a condition of charging fees above 拢6,000. In her speech, she referenced the聽University of Birmingham鈥檚 free school, opened the previous year. May foresaw universities ultimately being required to sponsor 鈥渢hriving school chains in every town and city in the country鈥.

As our cover feature sets out, US universities are also being looked upon to support local schools and facilitate a more seamless transition to higher education. And there have been several successful initiatives.

But do universities really have the expertise or the bandwidth to get heavily involved in schools? University of Oxford vice-chancellor Louise Richardson dismissed May鈥檚 plans as a 鈥渄istraction鈥, saying: 鈥淲e have no experience in running schools. There are many wonderful teachers and headteachers throughout the country and I think it's, frankly, insulting to them to suggest that a university can come in and do what they are working very hard to do.鈥

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The Brexit black hole into which policymaking was plunged post-referendum consumed May鈥檚 plan, but last November, then universities minister Michelle Donelan聽announced聽a plan to require English universities to 鈥渋mprove outcomes for disadvantaged children by driving up education standards in schools and colleges in the local community鈥. Specific measures were not mentioned, but 鈥減roviding tutoring services鈥 was suggested.

Another idea, articulated in 2019 by former public school and grammar school head Martin Stephen, is for universities to 鈥渂ecome involved again in the examination system鈥 to combat the competition聽among exam boards that he saw as driving down standards, leaving poorer students ill-prepared for selective universities. He also suggested that access initiatives should be targeted earlier: 鈥淢inds are often made up by the age of 14; schemes need to start with 11- and 12-year-olds, or even earlier.鈥

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Indeed, according to Sandy Baum and Michael McPherson, was featured in 糖心Vlog, universities might even consider lobbying for more expenditure on early years provision since 鈥渃ompensating at later ages for the effects of early inequalities in children鈥檚 treatment and opportunity is more expensive, less effective, and more limited in reach than preventing the inequalities in the first place鈥.

Whether Donelan鈥檚 policy will survive the latest Conservative leadership contest is open to question. Frontrunner Liz Truss is a former equalities minister, but her 2020 speech in that capacity announcing a 鈥溾 mentioned universities only in the context of endorsing then education secretary Gavin Williamson鈥檚 plan to introduce post-qualification admissions on the grounds that poorer students鈥 grades are more likely to be under-predicted. That plan was dropped after Williamson was sacked, but Truss that she wanted to revive it. She also plans to offer all students who receive three A*s at A level an automatic Oxbridge interview.

How much that will do for social mobility is open to question.听罢谤耻蝉蝉 that she herself got to Oxford despite going to a Leeds comprehensive whose pupils were 鈥渓et down by low expectations鈥. And she has that the school spent so much time teaching about 鈥渞acism and sexism [that] there was too little time spent making sure everyone could read and write鈥. The fact that universities, too, are by the right about 鈥渨okeism鈥 leaves it open to question whether Truss would see them as the solution to such alleged failings in schools.

Then again, while ministers cherish their ability to impose their own agendas on schools, the idea of being able to blame university leaders for any spluttering in the engine of social mobility will surely remain tempting.

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paul.jump@timeshighereducation.com

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