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Civic universities should offer places to all locals who make the grade

Ease of entry encourages access, and most universities have enough places to guarantee entry without requiring personal statements, says Tim Leunig

July 10, 2024
Illustration of a people queuing up to a desk with a “Welcome” banner hanging above it
Source: Getty images (edited)

Civic universities do many things for their local communities. But they could do a lot more.

My challenge to them is to identify the facilities they have that their community needs and throw them open. Those could be libraries and wi-fi. They could be classrooms for the local University of the Third Age to use in evenings or vacations. Vacations are the time to offer sports, arts and drama facilities, or halls of residence for those in need.

No door should be left closed without the strongest possible reason. And wherever possible, access should be free – most of these facilities cost nothing at the margin. Where possible, sponsorship from local employers and charities can be sought. When you do the right thing, money can often be found.

But universities can and should go further still, taking open access right to the heart of their core purpose: education. And I don’t mean lectures for local interest, important though these are. I mean access to degree courses.

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Most newer universities have a strong local presence. Almost half the students at Sheffield Hallam University, for instance, live in greater Sheffield. Most commute from home. That is not for everyone but it is an important option for many, particularly those from poorer backgrounds. But all civic universities, new and old, should make a blanket offer of a place to any local child who gets the relevant grades for the relevant course, without the need to write a personal statement and the other stuff that is currently required.

Of course, we have to be a little careful here. This proposal could not cover medicine, because the government limits the number of places. Similarly, if Oxford said that anyone who lived in the city and got AAA was guaranteed a place, a lot of well-off people with academically able children would surely move to Oxford, making access largely determined by parental wealth.

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That said, neither Oxford nor Cambridge has ever claimed to be a civic university, so let’s put them to one side. We also need to be careful in London – no university could offer unconditional places to the city’s 40,000 annual school-leavers – but London universities could cooperate to ensure good local access.

This idea would work well elsewhere. Liverpool, for example, has about 2,500 sixth-formers a year, while Sheffield has 2,000. The universities take roughly 6,000 and 5,000 UK undergraduates a year respectively. Since not all local sixth-formers will want to go to their local university or will get the grades, such universities could have an open access local offer without any difficulties in providing the relevant number of places. We also all know that most selective universities currently reduce grades to fill their final places – so winning over more local students who actually have the grades would strengthen their intakes.

Imagine being a teacher talking to a capable student from a non-traditional background in Newcastle who doesn’t know any graduates and is unsure whether university is for them. Imagine being able to say: “I can guarantee that if you get the grades, Newcastle University will take you.” The academic literature tells us unambiguously that ease of entry encourages access. Sometimes that conversation between teacher and pupil will be enough.

Even if it isn’t, if the sixth-former achieves the relevant grades, on results day the teacher can say, “We, your school, will certify that you got the grades and live in the city. All you need to do is click ‘send’ and you have a place for this year.” Some students will be willing to take that step – a step that has no possibility of rejection. It would change lives.

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There will be questions, of course, about where town and city boundaries should be. But let us not make the best the enemy of the good. Let the sector find a selective civic university willing to stand up and be counted, willing to pilot this. Their education and statistics department can calculate how many people in an area typically get these grades. If it seems too risky, start small and do this only for students who have been eligible for free school meals. Or restrict it initially to students from a tightly defined area.

Then civic universities should go further and interrogate national databases to find how many students in their local communities had the grades but attended either no university or attended a much less selective university, typically leading to lower-paid jobs and fewer career options. They should then convene such students and ask them what would have persuaded them to take up the offer of a place. More information? More part-time courses? Bursaries? Different courses? Degree apprenticeships? Good qualitative survey work – sometimes termed immersive research – will be key to understanding what works.

Every student at every local school – and their parents – should be able to see a route to university in their community. A route that is easy to explain and can be plastered all over local bus stops: “Get the grades, get a place.”

This is what it means to be a civic university: in your community, of your community, for your community.

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is visiting professor in practice in the School of Public Policy at the London School of Economics. This is an edited version of his contribution to The Kerslake Collection: The future of universities and their places, five years on from the UPP Foundation Civic University Commission, edited by Sir Chris Husbands and Richard Brabner and published on 10 July.

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Reader's comments (4)

In effect a return to the public service roots of the great 1900s Civics set up in the industrial cities to serve the local population and also the local economy - commuter students the norm into the 1930s and until such Civics began to build Halls of Residence (with ‘high tables’ mimicking Oxbridge). And fees carefully set to match local affordability - see discussion in Tapper & Palfreyman, Reshaping the University (OUP, 2014). With jacuzzi-in-the-dorm bedrooms in Unite blocks now costing north of ?250 pw over 50 weeks the massive cost of Going to Uni is more driven by accommodation than tuition fees: sustainable?
I wonder if the horse has bolted on this one. Civic universities used to be much more broadly-based, but have increasingly specialised, closing down languages and science departments in favour of areas they have a national advantage. A 'local students' offer wouldn't be much good to the talented linguist or musician in Oxford - where Oxford Brookes has essentially closed both Departments.
I'm pretty sure this is already the case. My department (Science department in a Northern russel group uni) will already take anyone who gets the grades (AAB), local or not.
This is one of those ideas that sounds great, until you consider the knock-on effects. I completely agree about widening access - but what would be the effect on those universities which already have a far better record at widening access, and offer a better standard of teaching and student support, than the universities the author has in mind? Although, to be fair, Leunig does praise Sheffield Hallam, in relation to Liverpool he doesn't actually specify which university in Liverpool he is referring to. From the context, it is safe to assume he means the Russell Group one, which alone takes the 6,000 undergraduates a year referred to. But there is no acknowledgement of the existence of Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool Hope University or Edge Hill University (located just outside Merseyside but with many of its students from inside). Which is odd as Liverpool University, for all its strengths, arguably has less claim to being a 'civic university' than the other local universities. Edge Hill, where I work, has long routinely done all the community access things Leunig is urging, and LJMU even uses the term 'civic' in its branding. Moreover there is already a major problem with over-recruitment in many courses at the most prestigious institutions, which both leads to a worse student experience there and reduces provision elsewhere. In London for example, UCL and one or two other institutions are increasingly monopolising Humanities provision at the expense of everywhere else, so there's little prospect of the cooperation called for. So it's already the case that for most courses in most universities, it's not the universities who select the students - it's the students who select the universities. One would not know this, however, from a national policy debate skewed towards a small number of highly selective courses at a small number of highly selective institutions. Finally, as a public transport nerd, I feel obliged to point out that university advertising is already 'plastered all over' public transport - it's just that one generally finds it on buses (and Merseyrail station escalators) rather than on bus stops, for the reason that adverts on bus stops are most visible to drivers, which is not the best targetted way to reach young people who can't afford to drive.

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