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Willetts looks to dismantle the ELQ bar

Minister points to ‘incremental’ removal and sounds warning over Labour fees policy

Published on
October 3, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Source: Getty

Focusing minds: David Willetts wants to see more women in STEM subjects

David Willetts wants to “go further†in letting more people study for second degrees on state-backed loans, rolling back Labour’s unpopular decision to block such funding.

Speaking to 51³Ô¹Ï at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester this week, the universities and science minister also said that the sector needed to “recognise the risk†it faces with Labour and its £6,000 fees policy.

In a speech at the conference, Mr Willetts announced that fee loans would be extended to part-time students in engineering, technology and computer science who already have degrees in different disciplines.

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This is a small-scale reversal of Labour’s 2008 decision to withdraw funding for students taking equivalent or lower-level qualifications (ELQs) to those they already hold.

In his speech, Mr Willetts framed the move as part of a drive to encourage more women to study engineering subjects.

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However, he told THE that he had been persuaded that “one reason for the part-time slump is the effect of ELQâ€.

His comments come in the same week that a report published by the Higher Education Policy Institute suggests that loans have not been offered to enough part-time students to arrest a decline in the numbers taking such courses.

Mr Willetts said he would like to “go further, step by step†and remove the ELQ bar in more subjects. “One could dream of a world where we just get rid of it, but I think we’re not in that territory. But you could do it incrementally,†he added.

The cost of the move in engineering and technology subjects will eventually rise to £23 million a year, the government estimates.

After his speech, Mr Willetts spoke at a fringe event alongside Bill Rammell, the former Labour higher education minister who introduced the ELQ bar.

Mr Rammell, now vice-chancellor of the University of Bedfordshire, said that the reform was welcome “at one levelâ€.

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But he asked where the money would come from. “If it is coming from restricting access for full-time, first-degree entrants, then I think that is a cause for concern,†Mr Rammell told the event.

But Mr Willetts told THE: “The part-time loan budget, sadly, is underspent…So we have that room.â€

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The minister also announced that £200 million of capital funding secured in the most recent spending round – match-funded by universities or company sponsorship – would be allocated for teaching facilities in science, technology, engineering and mathematics subjects.

The funding – again aimed at getting more women studying STEM subjects – will be allocated on a competitive basis, with “evidence of commitment to equality and diversity†sought in bids.

Mr Willetts said that “some version of Athena Swan†showing institutional strategies for increasing diversity “will focus mindsâ€, adding that the lack of women in some STEM subjects was “a waste of talentâ€.

In 2011, Labour unveiled a policy to lower fees to £6,000 if it were in power. Mr Willetts called Labour’s policy “a real threat to the financial viability of our universities†and to standards of student education.

He added: “All my intelligence says there’s a bit of an argument going on within Labour whether to stick with the £6,000 fee policy.â€

Asked if he might be moved in a reshuffle, Mr Willetts said: “I think it is bad form for ministers to speculate about their own jobs.â€

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john.morgan@tsleducation.com

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