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The strategic view – how can contextualised admissions work in the new competitive environment and what does the SPA research tell us? Janet Graham and Peter Chetwynd, SPA

What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

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The strategic view – how can contextualised admissions work in the new competitive environment and what does the SPA research tell us? Janet Graham and Peter Chetwynd, SPA. What is SPA and why did we commission this research?. SPA’s mission and role - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

The strategic view – how can contextualised admissions work in the new competitive environment

and what does the SPA research tell us?Janet Graham and Peter Chetwynd, SPA

Page 2: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

SPA’s mission and role

SPA promotes fair admissions and access to higher education in the UK by developing and leading on good practice in the recruitment and selection of students.

SPA is an independent and objective Programme, funded by HEFCE, DELNI, SFC, UCAS and Universities UK

We evaluate and commission research enabling us to develop evidence based good practice

Interest in using contextual data in HE providers is growing, as highlighted in the SPA survey on contextual data use, February 2013

Page 3: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

“Equal opportunity for all individuals, regardless of background, to gain admission to a course suited to their ability and aspirations.”

What is Fair Admissions?

1. be transparent2. enable institutions to select students who are able to

complete the course as judged by their achievements and their potential

3. strive to use assessment methods that are reliable and valid

4. seek to minimise barriers to applicants5. be professional in every respect and underpinned by

appropriate institutional structures and processes

Page 4: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Fair admissions and fair access: what’s the difference?

If fair admissions covers the five principles, is fair access about getting more disadvantaged students into ‘top’ universities? Supporting the most able but least likely to apply?

Yes, but that’s only part of the issue

Raising aspirations and encouraging and supporting all students with potential to aim higher for an HE course that is right for them at an institution that can provide what they need, when they need it - full-time, part-time, flexible or distance learning etc

Page 5: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

What is contextualised admissions?

Contextualised admissions is defined as contextual information and contextual data used by HE providers to assess an applicant’s prior attainment and potential to succeed in higher education in the context of the circumstances in which their attainment has been obtained.

Page 6: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Contextualised admissions and holistic assessment

Page 7: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Basket of Data

Educational Background School performance: % of students

achieving 5+ Standard grade SCQF level 4 including English and Maths (or equivalent A*-C GCSE)

Average point score by school “best 8” Standard grade SCQF level 4 (or equivalent for GCSE. Not available NI)

Scottish Highers average point score per Higher entry and points for Highers per student (or equivalent for A level. Not available NI)

Socio-Economic Background % of students registered for free

school meals by School (historical data only by Local Authority)

% of students entitled to EMA (not England)

Lives in a low progression to higher education neighbourhood (POLAR 2 and POLAR 3) derived from postcode

SIMD Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SFC version)

Supplied free by UCAS, if universities and colleges sign up to take it.

Initial basket of data for HEIs, via UCAS, for 2014 entry

Page 8: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Why use contextualised admissions?

Universities UK

“Student recruitment would be relatively straightforward if we had a level playing field, with all young people, wherever they lived, whatever their parental background, and the type of school they attended, having an equal chance of attaining the highest grades of which they were capable and progressing on to university.”

Unfortunately this is not the case.

Page 9: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

External policy drivers impacting admissions

Page 10: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

External policy drivers impacting admissions Increasing divergence in the HE policy frameworks round the UK:

Changes and developments to the Pre-HE curriculum Issues round advice and guidance for potential students Student number controls - policy varies round UK Tuition fees and student finance – policy varies round UK

But HE providers recruit UK-wide, changing patterns of behaviour Demographics - Fewer young applicants until 2020

Page 11: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Strategy in a competitive landscape

Competition between HE providers is growing.

There is an increasing need to seek out students with potential from a wider

range of backgrounds.

Page 12: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Strategy in a competitive landscapeSo does this mean moving away from academic rigor and high standards? No. It is about supporting the delivery of fair admissions and maintaining high

academic standards. It is about seeking excellence by identifying the ‘best’ applicants with the

greatest potential and likelihood of a successful degree outcome.

Page 13: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Strategic importance of contextualised admissions:

Facilitates reaching targets

Improves calibre of entrants

through identifying potential

Widens participation and

enhances diversity of the student body

Supports the applicant

experience

Could aid social mobility

Helps delivery of fair admissions

Helps assess applicants for financial support

Helps identify applicants who may benefit from

additional support

Page 14: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

SPA Research: What is contextualised admissions?

Contextual Data from data fields in applications, or data linked to application data

field. can include data provided from

public sources via UCAS or from commercial or other sources (government departments/ agencies).

flagging or coding is often employed by universities and colleges.

Contextual Information gained through assessment of

information about applicant circumstances e.g. from o personal statemento referenceo additional questionnaire o local knowledge of schools

and colleges not new but can be ad-hoc

Page 15: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

“There is a degree of fairness and transparency… and at least we are being consistent. It’s better than stereotypical decision making by an individual member of an admissions team.”

Contextual data provide an opportunity for systematic and transparent use of additional applicant information

Page 16: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

How did the researchers examine the evidence for contextual data in admissions? Undergraduate admissions

To what extent is evidence available? How is evidence used?

Stakeholder interviews Desk Research Scoping Survey Institutional visits

Selection of institutions Telephone interviews

Page 17: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Why is contextual data used?Academic Excellence

CompetitionEvidence-baseIncrease applicant poolExternal policy driversDiversity as pedagogical value

Fair admissions“We are very aware of the differences out there, and it’s obvious when students come to study with us that the brightest sparks do not always come with the best grades.”

Page 18: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

What is the Challenge?

Social ClassGenderEthnicity

Admission

School/college grades

SchoolArea

Merit

Origin Destination

Page 19: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Scientific ‘Gold standard’: good, individual-level data

Caveats:

Data availability

Expertise and cost

Limitations (often young, UK domiciled HE applicants)

Outreach or / and admissions

Area

IndividualEvidence 1:What matters for measuring academic potential?

Page 20: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Evidence 2: Same grades same potential

Students from different types of school perform differently In the majority of research, those from state schools outperform

independent school students or those from poorer performing schools outperform those from higher performing schools

(Oxford, Bristol, Cardiff, HEFCE, Scottish institution) This is not confirmed in one other case study where school did not affect

degree results

(Cambridge) Studies use different ways of thinking about and measuring disadvantage

as well as attainment

Page 21: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Evidence 3:Positive progress where students admitted using contextual data

Positive benefits for individual providers (recruitment, conversions, PIs)

“…can only work if you get the applicants…. to do that you have to change the perception that the university is ‘not for me’.”

Comparative research into performance of contextualised students supports the approach

Research into outcomes achieved by WP outreach groups confirms performance (e.g. PARTNERS, LEAPS)

Building commitment to those who enter

Page 22: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Evidence 4: Transferring evidence into practice

Case study providers

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Methodology:                

Application of data F F TA TA F F FA F

Approach:                

Implications (beyond additional consideration)

  AO I   AO (some)

GO/I AO MO

‘Formal’ application of contextual data into holistic decision making

Page 23: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Contextual data indicators 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

School performance indicator for Level 2/age 16          

School/college performance indicator for Level 3/age 18       School/college higher education progression indicator          

Low Participation Neighbourhood indicator         Area of relative deprivation            

Other geo-demographic indicator (ACORN and OAC)          

Outreach indicator (completion of agreed programme)         Declaration of exceptional circumstance           Higher education background indicator              

‘In care’ indicator   Other individual indicator (refugees)              

Page 24: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Useful practices

Using multiple datasets

Checking information

Using ranked data

Using additional information for marginal decisions

Dealing with missing data

Page 25: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Recommendations

Rationale and understanding Conceptual clarity Sharing expertise, good practice and networking Communication

Data and indicators Centralised data provision Data transfer

Research Long term comparative research Other admissions Different provider contexts

Page 26: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

From the report to practice:

Use of contextual data and information aligned to strategic mission

Contextual data can be a helpful part of holistic admissions

Senior management buy-in

Good record keeping

Linked systems for widening participation, admission, student progression, graduation and beyond

Create / use HEI own ‘baseline’ evidence base

Page 27: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

From the report to practice:

Know what data is out there and how to use it

Appropriately trained staff

Transparency about how and when contextual data is used

Integrated approach to outreach and admissions

and ideally to support the student experience, retention, and graduation

‘Access without support is not opportunity’

If possible, sharing of expertise, creation of a comparative evidence-base

Page 28: What is SPA and why did we commission this research?

Janet Graham and Peter Chetwynd

More information from SPA [email protected] or 01242 544891

Any questions?

www.spa.ac.uk