Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Students graduating
The commission said ‘the more selective universities are worst offenders for providing access to students from low socioeconomic backgrounds’. Photograph: Chris Radburn/PA
The commission said ‘the more selective universities are worst offenders for providing access to students from low socioeconomic backgrounds’. Photograph: Chris Radburn/PA

Students should be told of university course job prospects, says commission

This article is more than 1 year old

Social Mobility Commission says students should be informed of ‘earnings implications’ of course choices

Students should be given more details about how the courses they study after leaving school might affect their employment prospects, it has been suggested, as figures show near-record numbers of 18-year-olds applying to university.

A review of research into the employment effects of higher and further education by the government’s Social Mobility Commission showed wide variations in earnings, with some courses failing to boost salaries, while the most lucrative courses for graduates often admitted few students in England from disadvantaged backgrounds.

“Many of the more selective universities are top performers for boosting earnings but worst offenders for providing access to students from low socioeconomic backgrounds,” said Alun Francis, the commission’s interim chair. “To improve social mobility, we need these universities to do even more to improve access.

“We need to ensure prospective students are aware of the earnings implications of all their higher education and further education options, so they can make an informed choice, before applying.”

Commentary accompanying the literature review said selective universities “would seem to be hindering social mobility” by admitting few students from disadvantaged backgrounds.

However, the report found that the most selective institutions – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial College London and the London School of Economics – had admitted many more state-educated students in recent years.

The authors said it would take many years, until the most recent graduates reached age 30, to see what the long-term effects on their employment prospects would be.

The report also highlighted earlier findings that students from lower socio-economic backgrounds were more often going to less selective universities than their better-off peers, even if they had the same exam grades, resulting in lower earnings in later life. “Of course, students may still choose these courses for other valid reasons but they need to be aware of the possible labour market implications,” the report stated.

The latest figures from the Ucas admissions services show that sixth-form students remain enthusiastic about going on to higher education.

Ucas said more than 41% of UK 18-year-olds applied for university places by its January deadline, slightly less than last year’s rate of 43% but higher than pre-pandemic levels. In January 2020, 39% of UK 18-year-olds had applied through Ucas for undergraduate courses.

The total number of applications by 18-year-olds to start courses in autumn was nearly 315,000, compared with 320,000 in 2022 and significantly higher than the 275,000 applicants at the same point in 2020.

Looking at England alone, the rate of applications by sixth-form pupils fell from 44% last year to 42% this year, with Clare Marchant, Ucas’s chief executive, saying that “a slight recalibration” was expected after bumper numbers applying during the height of the Covid pandemic.

“Over the past five years the number of UK 18-year-old applicants has risen by 17% and we anticipate this upward trajectory will continue over the remainder of the decade,” Marchant said.

Across all age groups there was growth in applications for computing courses, but steep falls in applications for nursing and education training.

Bridget Phillipson, the shadow education secretary, was critical of failures to encourage more women to take up apprenticeships in science, technology and engineering (Stem), citing figures that just 65,000 women had started Stem apprenticeships since 2016-17, compared with 522,000 by men.

“Both the lack of science teachers in our schools and dwindling apprenticeship opportunities are denying women opportunities to build the Stem careers of the future,” Phillipson said.

This article was amended on 9 February 2023. An earlier version said that the four most selective institutions had admitted many more disadvantaged students in recent years, citing an estimate given in the commission’s review that about 31% of students at the four universities were previously eligible for free school meals. The commission has now corrected this, saying its estimate is actually for students from non-state-school backgrounds. The article’s text has been changed accordingly, and references to 31% and free school meals deleted.

Most viewed

Most viewed