Record 500,000 started university

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 Desember 2014 | 15.36

19 December 2014 Last updated at 00:47 By Sean Coughlan Education correspondent

The number of UK university entrants passed 500,000 for the first time in 2014, with women still more likely to enter higher education than men, Ucas admissions service figures show.

Among 18-year-olds, 34% of women were allocated university places, compared with 26% of men.

The gap is more than 50% in a quarter of parliamentary constituencies.

The admissions figures also suggest more students with lower grades are getting places at top universities.

About a third of applicants getting BBB grades got places in "higher tariff" universities, about twice as many as in 2011.

There was also an increase in universities making unconditional offers to applicants they most want to recruit.

Wide variations

This year's university admissions figures show a rising tide of more applications, more offers and more accepted places.

Some 512,400 people secured places in UK universities and colleges through Ucas applications in 2014, up nearly 17,000. The number of UK students rose 3% to 447,500, and there was a record number of students from outside the UK.

But there were wide variations among the UK entrants.

The Ucas figures suggest women are much more likely to enter university than men. This applies to both rich and poor families and across almost all regions.

According to Ucas, two decades ago there was no gender gap, but this has now become one of the most distinctive features of applications.

Among 18-year-olds, the numbers of women going to university is continuing to rise more quickly than their male counterparts.

In some constituencies the male entry rates are even lower. In Bristol South only 11% of 18-year-old men go on to university.

In contrast there are constituencies where more than half of female school leavers go straight to university.

Ucas says the gender gap in entry rates is the equivalent of 32,000 "missing" male students.

Regional differences

While the gap between male and female is at its widest ever, the gap between rich and poor is at its lowest.

Record numbers of disadvantaged students are getting places in higher education, rising by 11% compared with last year.

These students were particularly likely to enter with BTEC qualifications, rather than A-levels.

But regional differences remain across the UK. Young people in London and Northern Ireland are the most likely to enter university - those in Wales and the South West of England have the lowest entry rates.

There are even lower figures for Scotland, but these are incomplete because Ucas does not cover admissions for all Scottish higher education.

There are even wider local differences - with some places having average entry rates below 15% while others are above 50%.

Buyers' market

The admissions figures also show the growing competition between universities to attract students.

Universities are making more offers than ever before, 1.8 million this year, with students with high predicted grades getting four or five offers.

Students without A or A* grades at A-level were more likely this year to have got into a selective "higher tariff" university. For students with three B grades, 35% got places into a top-tier university, compared with 32% last year and 17% in 2011.

Among students with BBC grades, 15% got places at higher tariff universities, compared with 6% in 2011.

For applicants with DDE grades, 12% got into "medium tariff" universities and 58% found a place at a "lower tariff" university.

Across all types of university, the Ucas figures show that 85% of 18-year-old applicants from England were accepted for a place somewhere.

Mary Curnock Cook, Ucas chief executive, said the increase in university entrance by disadvantaged students was a "stunning account of social change".

"These trends are pushing the difference in entry rates between rich and poor to historic lows," she said.

Nicola Dandridge, chief executive of Universities UK, said the rising number of applications represented the end of the volatility that followed the increase in tuition fees.

"It suggests a return to stability in university applications following the changes and dip in 2012," she said.

Universities Minister Greg Clark said: "For the first time ever over half a million students have entered higher education, with entry rates for students from disadvantaged backgrounds increasing by over 10% to its highest ever levels across the UK.

"Higher education is a transformational experience and that is why we are the first government to remove the limit on student numbers lifting the cap on aspiration."


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