The School Perspective

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Ms Greenwood Director of Higher Education

HE Guidance

Mrs Mandley Head of Careers & Work Experience Co-ordinator

Mr Culver Director VI Form

Ms Jordan [KJ] Dept Administrator i/c Open Day Bookings Mr Wood GAP Year Co-ordinator

Chris Fuller Southampton University

Mr Hunt Academic Tutor i/c Extra Exams: BMAT/UKCAT/ELAT/ HAT/PHAT etc etc


Purpose

To raise awareness of the HE sector and provide a basic background knowledge of issues that might affect research and choices To highlight the questions students need to be considering


Higher Education Factors we ask students to consider Why study at this level?

WHAT IS H.E?

What to study? Type of study?

Where to study?

Approximately 50,000 + courses to choose from! 424 HE Institutions to research/visit !!

How to apply? When to apply?

How to find out more?


PQA

RAE

Type of Study •

TQA

HESA

AABb offers

Tariff

Completion Rates

A* [only at A2 level] & UMS

Basic Choices of type of course:Single honours? Joint honours? Combined or Modular? Sandwich course? Erasmus? BSc/ M Eng? 3yrs? 7yrs?


What To Study? • Interests • Motivation for a course • Ability •

Morrisby feedback or other Psychometric testing???

Where to study? Always a vexed question – remember not all universities offer all subjects.

• Geographical Location • Campus vs City • University reputation


What Type of University? Metropolitan/Redbrick Universities [Manchester, Bristol]

Non-British Universities* [Antipodes, US, EU]

Campus Universities: [Warwick, Birmingham]

Collegiate Universities [Oxbridge]

Conservatoires [Royal College of Music] *Outside the UCAS system

Technological Universities: [Imperial, Heriot-Watt]


Pre A-level [Direct] = this September for next year

Deferred Entry = this September but for the year after next

WHEN to apply?

PQA = September AFTER A levels are secured [Take a GAP year after reviewing the situation]


The implications of fees! Students need to ‘compare the market’

£9,000 p.a. fees VS • Status of university • Employability of graduates • Average life time earnings


So, Why Bother? • The Glass Ceiling

• Higher unemployment amongst non-graduates • Graduate employment still a creditable : 91.1% • Youth unemployment: 20% • Graduates earn on average £12k a year more throughout their lives • Widen horizons

• ……because it’s possible!


Students have been actively encouraged to take the INITIATIVE in researching data SUBJECT

INSTITUITION The School of Pharmacy

Grad Employment 100%

Medicine, Dentistry, and Veterinary Science

99.3

Royal College of Music

98.%

Education

95.2

The University of Surrey

96.9

Subjects allied to Medicine

95.0

Law

93.3

Biological Sciences

90.6

Languages

90.4

Combined Subjects

90.0

Social Studies

89.8

Agriculture and related subjects

89.3

Historical and Philosophical Studies

89.3

Royal Agricultural College

96.4

The University of Nottingham

93.2

The University of Lancaster The University of Oxford

92.7

% employment

92.6

Aston University

92.3

Mathematical Sciences

88.9

The University of Salford

85.2

Physical Sciences

88.8

Business and Administrative Studies

88.4

Creative Arts and Design

86.8

Architecture, Building, and Planning

86.3

Engineering and Technology

85.9

Mass Communications and Documentation

85.3

Computer Sciences

81.8

The Liverpool Institute for Performing 81.4 Arts London Metropolitan University

74.5

London South Bank University

74.4 Source :HESA


Death By League Table

Our students are taught to use the information available to make sensible decisions E.G: Percentage of students in full time graduate employment within six months of leaving university Or Drop out Rates or Entry points required

However, there are often anomalies that need thinking through. For instance, Imperial has a higher graduate employment rate than Cambridge in this table. Imperial has specialised science courses. A significant % of Cambridge graduates go into research. League tables need to be looked at in context! Source:GUG

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Leagues Within Leagues Russell Group 1994 Group

Oxbridge Tompkins Table [Cambridge] Norrington Table [Oxford]

The Russell Group •Birmingham

•LSE

•Bristol

•Manchester

•Cambridge

•Newcastle

•Cardiff

•Nottingham

•Durham

•Oxford

•Edinburgh

•Queen Mary

•Exeter

•Queen’s Belfast

•Glasgow

•Sheffield

•Imperial

•Southampton

•KCL

•UCL

•Leeds

•Warwick

•Liverpool


The UCAS Process

Putting Ideas Into Actions 96.3% of our students achieve CF or CI

Indicator A2 grades in February

Discuss 4 or 5 choices with tutor

Visit Universities [NB: parents ARE very welcome]

AS levels

Post AS level decisions [UMS %]

Post AS, A level predictions EARLY in September [PQA implications]

Apply from September 1st

Pred. grade review after half term only


Useful information For students ▪

www.unistats.com Search and compare different courses and universities [a word of warning re: thestudentroom….]

For Parents • www.ucas.com/parents Information for parents including a guide to the process

• www.yougofurther.co.uk UCAS’ student networking site [ again, some unverifiable information]

www.ucas.tv Informative video guides for applicants including ‘how to guides’, case studies and tutorials

www.ucas.com/events For information on higher education conventions, subject-specific conferences and other events

www.direct.gov.uk/en/Parents Intended to give a broad view of options

• Please note that information can be accessed via our web site and via the ‘booklet’ you were sent via Parent Portal


The Higher Education Programme Throughout the VI Form students– and parents – are guided through the HE system, from how to research courses to how to fill in the actual application form. Please refer to the HE guides that are distributed at the appropriate times.

The school website provides you with a complete guide to the Higher Education preparation process as well as useful links and presentations


Research Other Sources

IT facilities

http://unistats.direct.gov .uk/

• • • • • •

School intranet – under Student Guidance www.universityadvice.co.uk www.universitycourse.co.uk

MOST IMPORTANTLY:• Your child’s TUTOR

www.UCAS.com

Prospectuses Hard /Electronic Heap The Times Online The Times Good University Guide The Guidance Centre The guidance booklet you’ve been given • Unistats and similar comparative sites


Resources There are MANY different methods of searching for University courses The UCAS entry profiles are the most useful guides to requirements


Useful Resources kept in the Guidance Centre but most are ON LINE via the School website


The Form •

Apply training in late June – Weds 19th June

Complete personal details

Draft personal statement - to tutor in plenty of time

Complete form either during Summer break or as soon as possible thereafter

Pay UCAS online and ‘send’ to referee’

Allow at least a fortnight after sending

The Reference •

HE1s to subject teachers in July indicating likely choice of course

Tutors compile draft reference once the application is marked as complete and sent to them

All applications to RMG for approval

HM ‘signs’ & sends

N.B: DEADLINES. Students sometimes forget that they’re only half way through the process at the point that they press ‘send’. They may need a little ‘chivvying’


Matching Ambition to Ability: be REALISTIC or be PQA

• • • • • •

Past results [GCSE profile & AS profile] Predicted grades [Not until September] UMS at AS level Examples of past offers in a particular subject UCAS ‘Entry Profiles’ – must match entry criteria Heap’s Degree Course Offers


Open Days • Students should discuss suitability with Tutor • BOOK place via kespay [ please ask students to let KJ know how many places required] • PLEASE use coaches not private transport wherever possible • Students MUST also book online with the University to ensure they have a place in specific talks/lectures [ see websites] • Cost varies according to coach hire • London: Departmental = [Student travel] but we do NOT encourage students to drive themselves!! Dates & details are available on the website


DEADLINES etc • 1st September

• Speech Day • Week before half term • At least 14 working days to process

• System closes @ Christmas


Communication The VI Form Tutor is incredibly important to the UCAS process and central to advice and guidance at this stage He or she will be facilitating the UCAS application & working alongside your son/daughter PLEASE keep your son/ daughter’s tutor informed and contact him/her if you have any questions or concerns during the remaining 4 terms of KES Basically, we all want the same…… Happy, fulfilled young men and women



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