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Private players clueless about graduate destinations

<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="standfirst">Findings likely to be of interest to BIS as student loan costs grow
August 1, 2013

Almost two-thirds of UK private providers do not know how many of their alumni are landing graduate-level jobs, a study shows.

With the vast majority of students choosing private providers for their perceived career-enhancing benefits, the lack of institutional knowledge about their graduates¡¯ fortunes is ¡°striking¡±, says the report commissioned by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Written by the independent research company CFE, the research paper, titled Privately Funded Providers of Higher Education in the UK, identifies 674 private providers and interviews representatives from 126 of those institutions.

Of those, 76 are unable to provide information about the destinations of their graduates six months after leaving higher education ¨C a statutory requirement for all publicly funded universities.

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Of those that have data, several record low numbers of alumni in graduate-level jobs.

Nearly a third of providers say that under half of their students in 2010-11 entered such jobs within six months of leaving, with 75 per cent of them saying that less than half their cohort continued their studies.

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The lowest figure at any publicly funded university for the proportion of students entering employment or undergoing further study six months after completion was 78.1?per cent, says the report, which was published on 25?July.

Some providers might not expect their students to enter the job market immediately, such as those catering for university entry, the report acknowledges.

Nonetheless, the results suggest ¡°low rates of progression into graduate level employment or further study¡±, especially when compared with the publicly funded higher education sector, the report adds.

Uncertainty over the fortunes of graduates leaving private providers is likely to be viewed with interest by BIS, particularly if poor employment rates lead to low debt repayment levels by those funded by state loans.

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Funding from the Student Loans Company for those studying at private providers rose to ?100.3?million in 2011-12, up from ?42.2?million the previous year.

The report recommends that BIS look again at asking private providers to collect data on their graduate employment records, although it recognises that this would be difficult given that about half of their estimated 160,000 students hail from overseas.

jack.grove@tsleducation.com

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<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="pane-title"> Reader's comments (1)
This is a very misleading piece of journalism. Firstly it seeks to compare the proportion in graduate jobs from private providers with the % in any firm of work or study from public providers- far fewer than 78.1% of "public" graduates are in graduate level jobs. Of course private providers may not know the relevant %s because hitherto they have not been permitted to take part in DLHE. The graduate level analysis is a piece of added value work undertaken by HESA - how many public universities would know this figure without access to this service? As for not knowing graduate destinations in general, the article rightly underlines that private providers have a high proportion of OS students, yet the public university DLHE survey only requires a 50% response rate for such students. So basically this is a report that,shock horror, a group of private providers may know a little less about their graduates than public providers who have had the benefit of the DLHE survey and its attendant analyses for a couple, of decades. If I didn't know better I might conclude that THES had an inherent bias against private providers ( whoever they might be these days..)
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