APPLYING TO HIGHER EDUCATION

21
APPLYING TO HIGHER EDUCATION SEPTEMBER 2013

description

APPLYING TO HIGHER EDUCATION. SEPTEMBER 2013. Why bother going to Uni?. The average graduate starting salary is approx £24000 (NI) Graduates entering law, banking and finance, IT and engineering can expect salaries above this - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of APPLYING TO HIGHER EDUCATION

Page 1: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

APPLYING TO HIGHER EDUCATION

SEPTEMBER 2013

Page 2: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Why bother going to Uni?

The average graduate starting salary is approx £24000 (NI)

Graduates entering law, banking and finance, IT and engineering can expect salaries above this

the average lifetime earnings of a graduate are £227,000 more than those of a non-graduate with two A-levels

The top earning graduate jobs of 2012 are law, investment banking and consultancy

Page 3: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

How do you apply?

Most applications will be through UCAS (electronically)

Applications for universities in Ireland are through CAO (electronically)

A few institutions are direct entry Many European countries charge lower

tuition fees than the UK (www.studyineurope.eu)

UCAS Student Guidance Interviews - September 23rd 2013 – 11th October 2013

Page 4: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Applications through CAO

Closing date of early February (meeting in November)

Up to 10 degree and 10 diploma choices Listed in order of preference No personal statement or reference Different values for grades compared to

UCAS tariff No conditional offers – selection by order of

preference and results in August www.cao.ie No tuition fees but a €2500 registration fee

(pa)

Page 5: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

UCAS application Timetable

Oxbridge and Medical / Dentistry / Veterinary

Applications

Closing date 15th October 2013Forms completed and handed in by 4th OctoberSent by 11th October 2013

All other applications

Closing Date 15th January 2014Forms completed and handed in by 18th OctoberSent by 13th November 2013

Page 6: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

The UCAS form

Register – username and password Personal details – name, address etc Choices – maximum of 5 realistic courses Education – schools attended, exams

completed and pending Employment – not very relevant to majority

of pupils Personal statement Cost £23

Page 7: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

The Personal Statement

• A personal statement is probably the single most important piece of work that pupils have had to do so far

• Justify course choice (very important for a vocational course)

• Work experience• Activities inside & outside school• Positions of responsibility• Concluding statement

Page 8: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

What happens next??

After the interview, pupils are asked to make any corrections as quickly as possible

Pupils then bring a finalised paper copy of their form to Mrs Browne

The form is checked one more time and pupils can now “pay and send”

The cost is £23 and paid online by debit/credit card

The form is automatically sent electronically to school

The school now writes the confidential reference and attached this to the electronic form and sends this to UCAS

Page 9: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

What happens then?? UCAS then sends the form electronically to all the

universities Admissions tutors then make a decision based on

the personal statement, predicted A-Level grades, admissions test scores, GCSE grades & A/S grades, evidence of motivation and the school reference

Some pupils may have to go to interview before a decision is made

They will reject an applicant, make a conditional offer or (rarely), an unconditional offer

Page 10: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

What does an offer look like?

May be expressed as grades eg ABB May be expressed as UCAS Tariff points eg

320 points May be expressed as a combination of the

two eg 320 points to include an A in chemistry

A detailed break down of tariff points is available on the UCAS website

At A2, A=120, B=100,C=80, D=60, E=40 The 4th AS grade is worth half these points

Page 11: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

What next?? If rejected, the decision is final but pupils can

ask for feedback Pupils must wait until all five decisions are

made before they can confirm any decision By early May, pupils accept a Firm

Conditional offer and an Insurance Conditional offer which should have lower grades

These are binding but there may be some leeway

UCAS Extra is available online from the end of February to the end of June if a pupil has no offers

Pupils can only apply to one course at a time in Extra

Page 12: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Finance 1 – Tuition fees

Universities in England, Scotland and Wales have now set their own tuition fees to a maximum of £9000

NI have set fees for NI students at £3575 All students will be eligible for a non-means

tested loan to cover their tuition fees. The student takes the responsibility for the loan which is repaid directly from their salary when they earn over £16,365

But they are optional

Page 13: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Finance 2 – Maintenance Loans

Loans are also available for living expenses Amount available depends on household

income (pre-tax income minus pension contributions and allowances for dependents)

London £6780 Living away from home £4840 Living at home £3750 If a pupil receives a maintenance grant, the

amount of maintenance loan available will be reduced

Also optional

Page 14: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Other info about loans

Loans are repaid at 9% of earnings above £16365

The time to repay is based on income and amount borrowed – not on a fixed time period

After 25 years, any remaining debt is wiped Interest on the amount is linked to inflation BUT, this means that you will owe the money

for longer and potentially repay more Loans do NOT go on credit files

Page 15: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Earnings (annually £)

Monthly repayment (£)

As a % of income

16365 0 0

17000 5 0.3

19000 20 1.2

21000 35 2.0

23000 50 2.6

24000 57 2.9

25000 65 3.1

Page 16: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Finance 3 - Grants

Grants are non-repayable Students from lower income households will

be eligible for a non-repayable grant up to £3475

If household income is less than £19203, student is eligible for the whole grant

If income is more than £41065, student is eligible for none of the grant

A sliding scale works in between the upper and lower limits

If a student is entitled to the maximum grant, the maximum maintenance loan is reduced

Page 17: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Finance 4 - Bursaries Universities have to provide additional

support to students who receive the full grant – a minimum of £347

These are non-repayable A number of scholarships are available in

engineering and IT Universities also have “Access to Learning

Funds” which are available to students on low incomes

Health Professional Degrees (S&LT, OT, Radiography etc) can have fees paid if pupil is accepted on NHS funded place

Page 18: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

Information available

www.hotcourses.com www.prospects.ac.uk (What do graduates do?

Section) DEL – “Financial Support for Higher Education

Students” (Apply in February/March) DEL – Student Finance Branch Education & Library Boards www.dfes.gov.uk/studentsupport www.studentfinanceni.com www.moneysavingexpert.com www.unistats.com

Page 19: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

How can I help?

Talk to your son / daughter about their choices

Check the form is completed correctly Discuss the content of the personal

statement and ask to read it Try to remind them of key dates Encourage, encourage, encourage!!

Page 20: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

What if I need help??

www ucas.com/parents (sign up to receive the UCAS parent guide and quarterly email bulletins)

Contact Mrs Browne at school (90702777 or [email protected])

Check the school’s website – all dates, presentations and useful websites are listed

Page 21: APPLYING  TO HIGHER  EDUCATION

QUESTIONS????