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Participation in higher education by ethnicity

Government statistics reveal that white school-leavers are less likely, proportionally, to enter higher education than those from other ethnic groups

Last updated
十月 29, 2015
Published on
十月 29, 2015
Participation in higher education by ethnicity (29 October 2015)

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show that 45 per cent of white students who took A levels or equivalent qualifications in 2012-13 entered higher education the following year, compared with 64 per cent of students described as being from an Asian background and 61 per cent of black school-leavers.

Black students were least likely to study at a Russell Group university, with only 7 per cent of them being admitted. The figures were 11 per cent for white students, and 13 per cent for students of Asian heritage.

The percentage of all 2012-13 school-leavers in “sustained destinations” – taking part in education or employment for at least two terms – the year after A levels was 73 per cent, up from 71 per cent the previous year. The proportion of students who were in higher education was unchanged, at 48 per cent.

chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

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Print headline: Whites least likely to move up: participation in higher education by ethnicity

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