How do we group higher education providers and students?

21
How do we group higher education providers and students? Marieke Guy and Simon Carpenter R&I Away Day 21 st January 2016

Transcript of How do we group higher education providers and students?

Page 1: How do we group higher education providers and students?

How do we group higher education providers and students?

Marieke Guy and Simon Carpenter

R&I Away Day21st January 2016

Page 2: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Grouping things…• Typology – the study

of types

• Classification – the action of classifying something

• Clustering – grouping according to similarities

Page 3: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Providers - the QAA

perspective

Page 4: How do we group higher education providers and students?

• Funding body (DEL, HEFCE, HEFCW, private, SFC)• Type of funding (direct, indirect) • Type (FEC, University/HEI, private)• Teir4, course designation, degree awarding powers,

University title• Course levels• Subscriber or non subscriber• Review outcome, quality mark• Student numbers (FT, PT), student type

(undergraduates, graduates, research), student domicile, campus locations

• Legal issues

Page 5: How do we group higher education providers and students?

The Institutional perspective

Page 6: How do we group higher education providers and students?

• Membership of body (Russell group, GuildHE, IUG, University Alliance, 157Group, ACU, Million+, Universitas21, Independent Universities Group… )

• Regional and geographic groupings• Time of establishment/architecture• Research (REF) or teaching focused (TEF)• University, University College, University of London• Specialism (art, sport…), faith based• Distance learning• Size (large => 25,000 students, small =<15,000)• Global, industry links• Self declared excellence (technology)

Page 7: How do we group higher education providers and students?

What’s the uniting feature of members?

Page 8: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Ancient University

Red brick or civic

Red brick chartered

Plate glass or 1960s

New university

Pre 1800s 1800 -

1900 1900 - 1963 1963 -

1992 Post 1992

Page 9: How do we group higher education providers and students?

• Carnegie classification• Howells et al:

Research led, third mission Local access Elite research London metropolitan High teaching growth Research orientated, teaching growth

• More???

Current research…

Page 10: How do we group higher education providers and students?

The student perspective

Page 11: How do we group higher education providers and students?

• Campus type, size and setting (city, metropolitan, surburban, small city, collegiate, campus)

• Location• Student profile (social status, widening

participation…)• Course offerings• League table rating• Satisfaction rating (NSS)• Entry standards (UCAS tariff)• Employability rating• Other metrics…

Page 12: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Do students all have the same approach to HEPs?

“…my gut instinct is that we don’t actually have enough information about the students we are admitting.”

(Louise Richardson Vice-Chancellor University of Oxford)

Page 13: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Need a more comprehensive typology of students …A start: • Baby boomers (born between 1945 to 1960ish)• Generation X (born between 1960s to the early

1980s)• Millennials/ Generation Y (born between 1980 and

2000)• Generation K or Z (born between 1995 and 2000ish)

Page 14: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Thoughts so far :

• Stepping stone (to another college/HEP)• Pure academic • Exploratory (personal and career)• Career advancers• Looking for vocational qualifications• Skill upgrading• Need (have to do something)• Degree seeking

(behaviours, not demographic)

Page 15: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Clark and Trow (1966)Involvement with ideas or involvement with institutionFour subcultures:

• Vocational• Academics• Collegiate• Nonconformist

Page 16: How do we group higher education providers and students?

Kuh, Hu and Vesper (2000)

• Disengaged• Recreator• Socializer• Collegiate• Scientist• Individualist• Artist• Grind• Intellectuals• Conventionals

Page 17: How do we group higher education providers and students?

So what is the relevance for R&I?

Page 18: How do we group higher education providers and students?

• Understanding the sector better• Understanding our stakeholders better• Going beyond metrics… (see the Metric Tide)• Implications for TEF, reviewing etc. • Positioning on ideas related to the level playing field,

one size fits all, risk-based review etc.• Myth busting • Supports the I in R&I!

Page 19: How do we group higher education providers and students?

What next?

• More thinking!• Comprehensive lit search• Possible paper?• Applying this to R&I work?• More on alternative

providers• Any other ideas?

Page 20: How do we group higher education providers and students?

“We have a genius for turning difference into hierarchy”David Eastwood, chair of the Russell Group

Page 21: How do we group higher education providers and students?

qaa.ac.uk

[email protected]

+44 (0) 1452 557000

© The Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education 2015

Registered charity numbers 1062746 and SC037786