Record numbers of A-level
students are being turned away from the country's leading universities, it
emerged today, as institutions declared themselves full more than a week before
the clearing system, which allocates last-minute places, opens.
A Guardian poll of 38
universities reveals that increasing demand for degree courses – up 11.6% this
year – intensified by the recession and a cut in available places means that
nine days ahead of A-level results, even some of the brightest teenagers in the
country, predicted to achieve more than 90% in their exams, are failing to
secure a university place.
Birmingham, Bristol,
Edinburgh and Warwick already have no places left on any of their courses. The
London School of Economics and St Andrews said they would have to turn down
students who narrowly missed the offers they received from other universities.
Oxford and Cambridge, in line with previous years, will have no places left.
Last year almost 48,000 students
found a university place through clearing – when institutions that have spare
spaces match-make students who have not made their offers for other
universities or apply late.
But the university admissions
service Ucas said the number of places in clearing this year will be "even
briefer and tighter than last year".
Admissions tutors predict
that clearing places vanish within two to three days of A-level results.
University leaders predict that as many as 170,000 students could find
themselves left without a place on a degree course. Last year the figure was
130,000.
The intense competition for
places has forced institutions such as Warwick, Cambridge and the London School
of Economics (LSE) to turn down even students predicted to get an A*, the new
grade introduced this year which was meant to enable universities to pick out
the brightest students. Students need to achieve a mark of 90% or more to
obtain the grade.
The LSE said pressure on
places made it "inevitable" that pupils who were predicted at least
one A* would be turned down. Warwick and Nottingham universities said it was
even possible that a student with a clutch of A* predictions could still be
turned down.
Cambridge has said it may
have rejected up to 8,000 applicants expected to achieve at least one A*. The
university is considering raising its minimum entry requirements from one to
two A* grades in two or three years.
The Guardian's poll reveals
that some universities will only offer students a place in clearing if they
have three As. Manchester University said it would have 50 places in clearing,
but those in humanities would need to be straight-A students.
Warwick said that to gain a
place on a physics degree in clearing a teenager would need three A-grades,
including in maths and physics, or an AAB with an A in maths and a B in further
maths. Sheffield said students applying for degree courses in English would
have to achieve two As and a B, while Leicester said that "where vacancies
exist, we will be seeking two As and a B".
Nottingham will have under
half the number of places in clearing it had last year – below 50. "Tough
competition means we will be turning away some very highly qualified students
with two As and a B rather than three As," a spokeswoman said.
Pat McFadden, Labour's shadow
skills secretary, said this year's scramble for places had been made worse by
the coalition government withdrawing 10,000 university places.
The Labour government planned
to provide 20,000 places for this autumn but this number was halved when the
new administration came into power. The universities minister, David Willetts,
has said that sixth formers who fail to secure a university place should start
a business or apply for an apprenticeship instead.
McFadden said cutting the
number of university places reduced opportunities for people to improve their
skills. "This is very shortsighted," he said.
Universities said the threat
of fines for over-recruiting students had also made them cautious about taking
on too many students. For the first time this year, 60 universities and further
education colleges were penalised £15.67m for over-recruiting 4,235 students.
The rise in applications has been attributed in part to the recession and a
wider shortage of jobs for school-leavers.
The university thinktank
Million+ has warned that the poorest students are the most likely to miss out.
Pam Tatlow, chief executive of the thinktank, which represents modern
universities, said under-represented groups, such as students from deprived
neighbourhoods, would miss out because they tended to have lower grades.
A spokeswoman for the
vice-chancellors' umbrella group Universities UK said increased pressure on
places would lead to a "challenging time for everyone".
"It is anticipated that
the clearing process for this summer will be briefer and tighter than in
previous years. However, universities are very experienced in handling high
numbers of applications and they have been preparing for this peak time for
many months now along with Ucas."
Source: Guardian.co.uk