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UCAS

The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS /ˈjkæs/) is a charity[1] and private limited company based in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, which provides educational support services.[2] Formed on July 27th, 1993 by the merger of the former university admissions system, Universities Central Council on Admissions and the former polytechnics admissions system, Polytechnics Central Admissions System, the company's main role is to operate the application process for British universities and colleges. The company is funded by fees charged to applicants and universities as well as advertising income.

Universities and Colleges Admissions Service
UCAS logo
AbbreviationUCAS
Formation27 July 1993; 30 years ago (1993-07-27)
TypePrivate limited company
PurposeEducational support services
Location
Chief Executive
Clare Marchant
Main organ
UCAS Board
Budget
£33 million (2011)
Websitewww.ucas.com

Services provided by UCAS include several online application portals, several search tools and free information and advice directed at various audiences, including students considering higher education, students with pending applications to higher education institutes, parents and legal guardians of applicants, school and further education college staff involved in helping students apply and providers of higher education (universities and HE colleges).

UCAS is most known for its undergraduate application service (the main UCAS scheme), however it also operates a number of other admissions services:

  • UCAS Conservatoires - application and search service for performing arts at the UK conservatoire.
  • UCAS Teacher Training (UTT) – for postgraduate teacher training schemes.
  • UCAS Postgraduate – application and search facility for some postgraduate courses.

Location edit

UCAS is based near Marle Hill in Cheltenham at the junction of the B4075 (New Barn Lane) and the A435 (Evesham Road), near Cheltenham Racecourse and a park and ride.[3] It is situated just inside the parish of Prestbury, Gloucestershire.[4]

History edit

UCAS was formed in 1992 by the merger of Universities Central Council on Admissions (UCCA) and Polytechnics Central Admissions System (PCAS) and the name UCAS is a contraction of the former acronyms UCCA and PCAS. An early proposal was made for the new merged body to be called PUCCA (Polytechnics and Universities Central Council on Admissions) but this was never adopted.[5]

UCCA was the older of the two bodies, having been formed in 1961 to provide a clearing house for university applications in the United Kingdom. It was created in response to concerns during the 1950s that the increase in University applications was unmanageable using the systems then in place, where each student applied individually to as many institutions as they chose. This concern led to the Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals (CVCP) setting up an ad hoc committee in 1957 to review the matter; this committee in its Third Report of January 1961, recommended the setting up of a central agency, which subsequently became known as UCCA. Its First and Second Reports had already made several recommendations aimed at harmonising admissions procedures across different universities.[6]

The name UCCA referred originally to the management board (the Central Council) overseeing the new process but soon came to refer to the organisation responsible for its day-to-day operation. This was based initially in London and moved to Cheltenham, Gloucestershire in 1968. The new scheme had a pilot year handling a subset of applications for entry in 1963 and its first full year of operation handled admissions for 1964.[7]

The scheme was essentially a collaborative venture between independent universities and membership was voluntary. Most English universities joined from the start. Oxford and Cambridge joined (with slightly modified procedures) for the 1966 entry; the London medical and dental schools, as well as Belfast and Stirling for the 1967. In 1965, UCCA handled 80,033 applicants, rising to 114,289 in 1969. The acceptance rate of UCCA applicants by universities in 1969 stood at just over 50%.[8]

Initially, the processing of applications was carried out using punched card technology. In 1964, UCCA started using the services of a computer bureau with a Univac machine; in 1967 it installed its own Univac computer.

Although the polytechnics were degree-teaching institutions, through the CNAA awards system, they were not eligible for admission to UCCA as it was reserved only for universities with degree-awarding powers. Despite this, the Polytechnics were involved as early as 1972 in discussions with UCCA and the Central Register and Clearing House about the possible future shape of one or more admissions systems.[9] At this stage applicants dealt directly with each individual polytechnic and the polytechnics themselves were strongly regional or local in their appeal. A study in 1977 found that between sixty and seventy per cent of those admitted to a polytechnic had applied to that institution only and that forty percent of admissions to polytechnics resulted from applications made in August or September of the year of entry.[9]

In 1983 the Committee of Directors of Polytechnics began negotiations with UCCA to share its computing, technical and office facilities in Cheltenham to establish a course entrance system, based on the existing model used by UCCA.[10] A grant of £210,000, from the British Department for Education and Science, was awarded to set up a new unified admissions system, provisionally called PUCCA.[5] However, instead of a unified system for both the universities and polytechnics, a separate system for polytechnics emerged from the negotiations, modelled on UCCA but known as PCAS. Applicants to courses were given the option to apply separately for universities or polytechnics, or both.

The PCAS system came into effect in 1985.[11] It was led by its first Chief Executive, Tony Higgins[12] and in the first year it handled around 140,000 applications to polytechnic courses, of whom 40,000 a year went on to study at polytechnics.[13]

Although many polytechnics offered art and design programmes and some also offered teacher training courses, these admissions systems remained outside PCAS.[11] Art and Design admissions worked to a later timetable as a result of the role Art Foundation courses had in developing a student's proposed specialism (painting, sculpture, graphic design, and so on). Work was furthermore generally submitted before a decision was made on whether to interview. However, means of absorbing the Art and Design Admissions Registry into UCAS were found by 1996.[14]

Although the aim to create a fully unified application system for universities and polytechnics was not achieved until 1994, from the '80s onwards Tony Higgins, the Chief Executive of PCAS, continued to push for the merger of PCAS with UCCA.[12] In 1992, following the change of status and name of most polytechnics to universities,[15] the two bodies combined under Higgins's leadership.[12] Initially the application form was branded jointly UCCA/PCAS[16] but in 1994 the new merged body was officially renamed UCAS.[17]

In 2015, the Amsterdam Fashion Academy became the first non-UK educational establishment admitted to UCAS.[18][19]

Undergraduate admissions schemes edit

Main undergraduate scheme edit

Since the vast majority of UK universities and higher education colleges use the UCAS service, most students planning to study for an undergraduate degree in the UK must apply through UCAS – including home students and international students.

Application edit

To apply to university, students must submit a single application via UCAS's online Apply service. The application itself requires the student to register to the service, giving a "buzzword" if applying through a centre, fill in personal details, write a personal statement and choose up to five courses to apply to, in no order of preference. They must then pay an application fee and obtain a reference before submitting their application online by the appropriate deadline. The application is then forwarded by UCAS to the universities and colleges that the students have applied to. After following their internal policies, which may include an interview, the institutions then decide whether to make students an offer of a place. An institution can make a student either an unconditional offer, where the student is assured a place, or a conditional offer, where the student will receive a place subject to specific grades being met. In certain circumstances, the university may withdraw the application before interviews, though this usually only occurs by some action on the applicant's part (not replying to emails in time for example).

For applications to universities in the UK, entry requirements for individual courses can either be based on grades of qualifications (e.g. AAA at GCE A-Level, a score of 43/45 in the IB International Baccalaureate Diploma, or a music diploma) or in UCAS points (e.g. 300 UCAS points from 3 A-Levels or an IB score equal to 676 UCAS points). To convert individual scores or grades of specific qualifications into UCAS points, UCAS has created tariff tables indicating indexes and ratios of UCAS points and results of qualifications.[20] For example, an A* at A-level is worth 56 UCAS points, an A 48, a B 40, and so on. For the IB, a score of 45 equals 720 UCAS points, a score of 40 is 611 points, a score of 35 is 501 etc.[21]

Personal details edit

Once logged into "Apply", applicants complete a number of personal details – including their current qualifications, employment, criminal history, national identity, ethnic origin and student finance arrangements. Applicants also have the option to declare if they have any individual needs – such as any disabilities; or if they are a care leaver.

Personal statements edit

The personal statement is an integral part of the application. It gives candidates a chance to write about their achievements, their interest in the subject they are applying for, as well as their suitability, interest and commitment to higher education. Personal statements can contain a maximum of 4,000 characters (including spaces) or 47 lines – whichever comes first, with a maximum of 94 characters per line. A research study conducted by UCAS with over 300,000 personal statements of students revealed that the personal statement (among the student's grades) is the most important part within the application process.[22] Plagiarism in personal statements is common[23] and UCAS uses Copycatch software to detect personal statements that are considered to have 30% or more "similarity" to statements submitted by others.[24] The free-form nature of the application also lead some applications to complete the essay in an absurdist manner.[25]

Due to being viewed by some as being rooted in class bias, UCAS began phasing out the statement in 2023, with the college class of 2025 being the last one mandated to complete it.[26]

Application fees and references edit

The final part of the process involves paying an application fee and obtaining a written reference. The process varies depending on whether a student is applying through a school, college, or UCAS centre or as an individual.

For the former, applications are sent to the school, college, or centre, who may ask applicants to pay their fee to them (which they then pass to UCAS) or pay UCAS directly, before they provide a reference and submit the form on the student's behalf. If applications are sent to the school, college, or centre, then they will attach a reference to send to UCAS. Applicants are responsible for ensuring that their school, college, or centre submits the application before the appropriate deadline for their courses.

Individual applicants should request their reference – from a teacher, adviser, or professional who knows them – before paying the fee and submitting the form themselves.

For most current applications, the cost per student is £22 to apply for a single course or £26.50 for two or more courses (as of 2022 entry).[27]

Application deadlines edit

Depending on the subject and on the university that they are applying for, candidates must submit their application by the relevant submission deadline to ensure their application is given "equal consideration" by the higher education providers they are applying to. The term "equal consideration" refers to the obligation on all course providers to "consider all applications received by this time equally".[28]

  • 15 October deadline: Those applying for medicine, dentistry and veterinary science courses and anyone applying to the universities of Oxford and Cambridge must submit their UCAS applications by 15 October – in the year before the student wishes to start their studies.
  • 25 January deadline (in 2023): The majority of applications must be submitted by 6 p.m. on 25 January (in the calendar year that the student wishes to begin their studies).[28]
  • 24 March deadline: Some art and design courses have a later application deadline – 24 March – to give applicants time to complete their portfolios.

It is possible for students to submit applications up until 30 June each year; but a late submission may not be given the same consideration as those submitted before the deadline. Applications received after 30 June are placed directly into Clearing.

Offers edit

Students must adhere to the appropriate deadline for their course. Whilst UCAS advises universities and colleges to send their decisions by the end of March, the universities have the responsibility of responding to applicants and may operate in their timescale. Many universities (like the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge) require that applicants come to an interview or be interviewed online before offers are received, or they may be asked to submit an additional piece of work before receiving an offer.

Offers are made through the UCAS Track service by universities and are either unconditional or conditional, where the latter means that the student will receive a place dependent on exam performance. Applicants also find out if they have been rejected through UCAS Track.

Once an applicant has received a reply from their choices, they must reply to their university before the deadline in May. Applicants normally choose two offers through UCAS, one as their firm choice and one as their insurance choice. A firm choice means that, if the student receives the grades required, then the student's conditional offer will be confirmed. An insurance choice means that, if the firm choice is a university that eventually rejects them due to their grades, then the student will get into that university if they have met the terms and conditions of the insurance choice's conditions. A student may only make an insurance choice if their firm choice is a conditional offer.

Certain universities have engaged in the dubious practice of making a "conditional unconditional" offer, meaning that a student was advised by the university that they would get an unconditional offer (and not then need to meet grade targets) but only if they made that university their firm choice. This served to guarantee both that the student would have a place and that the place would not be turned down if the student hit the grades required for a better or preferred course. This practice was temporarily banned at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic[29] and the UK government discourages universities from giving out these offers.[30]

Extra edit

If an applicant uses all of their five choices and does not receive any offers, or they decide to decline the offers they receive, they can apply for additional courses using UCAS' Extra service. This allows them to keep applying, one course at a time until they receive an offer they're happy with. Extra runs between mid-February and the end of June. If they do not receive an offer during this time, they have the option to enter into Clearing when it opens in July.[31]

Confirmation and clearing edit

When applicants receive their examination results, they will know if they have met the conditions of their firm and insurance choices. Universities give out unconditional offers and rejections when applicants receive their examination results.

Those that do have their offers confirmed are invited to accept a place on the course they applied to, which is called "confirmation". Many universities and colleges still accept students that narrowly miss their offer conditions.

Those that do not meet their "firm" and "insurance" offer conditions are eligible to use UCAS' Clearing service – which enables unplaced students to apply for courses with vacancies directly to the university. They do so by searching for an available course, using the UCAS search tool and contacting each university or college concerned for a place.

Although most available places are published following results days in August, it opens at the start of July each year and closes in October.[32][33]

Adjustment edit

Through what was known as "Adjustment", if applicants exceeded the conditions of their firm offer, they had the option to search for a place at another university or college while retaining their original offer. Adjustment was cancelled in 2022 and is no longer available.[32][33]

UCAS Conservatoires – performing arts scheme edit

UCAS operates Conservatoires UK Admissions Service (formally known as CUKAS) in conjunction with Conservatoires UK, managing applications for both undergraduate and postgraduate music, dance, and drama courses at nine UK conservatoires:

  • Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London
  • Leeds Conservatoire
  • Royal Academy of Music, London
  • Royal Birmingham Conservatoire (part of Birmingham City University)
  • Royal College of Music, London
  • Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester
  • Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, Glasgow
  • Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama, Cardiff
  • Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, London

Students must apply through the online CUKAS service by:

  • 1 October – for most music courses
  • 15 January – for most undergraduate dance, drama, and screen production courses

UCAS postgraduate admissions schemes edit

UTT – postgraduate teacher training edit

UCAS Teacher Training (UTT) is an application service for postgraduates that want to become teachers. UTT replaced UCAS' previous GTTR teacher training application service and expanded its remit to provide centralised admissions for School Direct and school-centred initial teacher training (SCITT) programs.

UTT programmes are either university/college-taught or school-based and typically last for one academic year; usually leading to a PGCE qualification.

Students begin their application in the autumn for programmes starting in the following academic year. They start by using Apply 1 – which allows them to choose up to three programmes. Training providers then have 40 working days to make an offer. During this time they will invite candidates they're considering offering a place for an interview. At the end of the 40-day period, students will have responses from their three choices and will have 10 working days to reply to any offers.

However, if students don't get offered a place using Apply 1, or they choose to decline all of the offers they receive, they can use Apply 2 to apply for new places, adding one choice at a time, until they receive an offer.

  • Apply 1 opens on 21 November each year
  • Apply 2 opens on 2 January each year

UCAS Postgraduate – postgraduate admissions scheme edit

UCAS Postgraduate (also known as UK PASS) is UCAS' postgraduate admissions service. It was introduced with the objective to offer students access to over 20,000 courses at 18 participating universities and colleges in England, Scotland and Wales – both taught and research courses leading to a variety of qualifications – including MA, MSc, MBA and LLM.

Other schemes edit

UCAS Progress – post-16 education and training admissions scheme edit

UCAS has launched UCAS Progress, a service enabling GCSE students to search and apply for post-16 work and education-based training courses – including academic and vocational courses (such as A levels and BTECs), as well as Apprenticeship and Traineeship programmes.[34]

The scheme is free for students to use and is implemented as a national service – listing post-16 opportunities from all across the UK.

UCAS Progress also helps schools, colleges and local authorities address recruitment issues and statutory obligations resulting from raising the age of participation in secondary education; an initiative that legally obliges students to remain in full-time education or work-based training until the end of the academic year that they turn 17. However, this is about to change after government reforms; when students will be required to remain in education or training until their 18th birthday.

UCAS Media edit

UCAS Media is a commercial enterprise that raises money by offering commercial organisations and education providers a channel to communicate with prospective students: in effect, it sells targeted advertising space. UCAS is a non-governmental and not-for-profit company. UCAS undergraduate admissions handled almost three million applications from 700,000 UK, EU and international students.

UCAS Media does not disclose information about applicants to its advertising clients. However, it does send advertisements to applicants on behalf of its clients and can target specific groups such as 'early adopters' or those located in a specific location.

All UCAS Media profits are fed back into the UCAS charity, much of which is gift aided. This reduces the fees paid by universities and by applicants for access to the UCAS service.

UCAS Media has proven controversial among data privacy campaigners. In 2014 deputy director of Big Brother Watch, Emma Carr was quoted as saying:

"UCAS is perfectly within the law to sell on this information, but the way they are doing so, as is the situation with most data gathering organisations, is underhand. It goes far beyond what students would expect them to do with their data. Students should be explicitly asked for their permission before UCAS can sell their information on and UCAS should be open and transparent about who it is selling the data on to."[35]

In 2019, Martin Lewis, the consumer finance expert, accused UCAS of abusing its position after it allowed a private debt company to promote high interest commercial loans to school leavers. UCAS had sent an email promoting loans by Future Finance, with interest rates of up to 23.7%, well above the current maximum of 5.4% on student loans and worse than most high street credit cards. In response, UCAS said: “UCAS is an independent charity ... This helps us to keep the costs for students applying to university as low as possible.”[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Charity Commission". www.gov.uk/government/organisations/charity-commission. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  2. ^ "THE UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES ADMISSIONS SERVICE overview - Find and update company information - GOV.UK". find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  3. ^ "SO9524 : UCAS, New Barn Lane". Geograph.org.uk. Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  4. ^ "Entrance to UCAS (C) Pauline E". geograph.org.uk. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  5. ^ a b Fairhall, John (12 January 1984). "Admissions streamlining plan for polytechnics". The Guardian. p. 2.
  6. ^ Peter Gordon and Denis Lawton, Dictionary of British Education (London: Routledge, 2003) p.254
  7. ^ Stewart, W. (1989). Higher Education in Post-war Great Britain. London: Macmillan. p. 88.
  8. ^ R.C. Slater, 'University Admissions' in The Proceedings of IEEE, vol. 8 no. 3, 1970, p.33
  9. ^ a b Kay, Ronald "UCCA: Its Origins and Development 1950=85", UCCA, 1985, pp.83–89
  10. ^ Audrey Segal, 'A rationalised confusion' in The Guardian (UK Newspaper) 31 January 1984, p.11
  11. ^ a b ' Introducing the new Polytechnic Central Admissions System' in The Guardian (UK Newspaper) 11 June 1985, p.11
  12. ^ a b c ' Sector pays tribute to Higgins, champion of access' in The Times Higher Education Supplement (UK newspaper) 23 April 2004
  13. ^ Edward Fennell, 'Horizons: Don't blot your copy book – The odds are moving back in favor of the applicant for higher education' in The Times (UK Newspaper) 21 September 1987
  14. ^ Editorial, Times Higher Education Supplement, 9 August 1996
  15. ^ Donald MacLeod, 'Poly genesis: Have the new universities lost their ray since they emerged from the old olytechnics ?', in The Guardian (UK Newspaper) 3 September 2002, Section B, p.12
  16. ^ 'The new joint UCCA/PCAS application form' in The Guardian (UK Newspaper) 10 September 1991, Section B, p.11
  17. ^ Jonathan Croall, 'Nightmare Scenario' in The Guardian (UK Newspaper) 19 August 1993, Section B, p.9
  18. ^ Moore, Jessica (10 April 2015). "Choosing a university abroad". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  19. ^ Ifould, Rosie (3 October 2015). "Who needs Oxbridge? Meet the British students headed for Europe". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  20. ^ UCAS Tariff
  21. ^ "Calculating Ucas points based on predicted grades - Which?". university.which.co.uk. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  22. ^ Hamill, Jasper (22 June 2015). "UCAS reveals the secret to writing uni applications: passion AND purpose". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  23. ^ "Degree applicants 'copy from web'". 7 March 2007.
  24. ^ "Personal statement dos and don'ts". 19 December 2019.
  25. ^ "Knowing Cardinal Pell, Chaput on 'anti-Francis' bishops, and the hubris of oyster sexing". The Pillar. 13 January 2023. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  26. ^ Editor, Nicola Woolcock, Education. "Ucas scraps personal statements for university hopefuls". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 18 January 2023. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ "The 2022 application: Latest update". UCAS. 29 March 2021.
  28. ^ a b UCAS, 2023 ENTRY DEADLINE FOR ALL UCAS UNDERGRADUATE COURSES, EXCEPT THOSE WITH A 15 OCTOBER DEADLINE, accessed 20 January 2023
  29. ^ Adams, Richard (3 July 2020). "'Conditional unconditional' university offers to be banned in England". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  30. ^ Middleton, Joe (7 March 2022). "Universities advised against 'conditional unconditional' admission offers". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  31. ^ "Not holding any offers? You might be able to apply for more with Extra!". UCAS. 17 October 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  32. ^ a b "Clearing in the UK". Study.eu.
  33. ^ a b "What is Clearing?". UCAS. 17 October 2014.
  34. ^ "About us". UCAS. 22 October 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  35. ^ Ward, Lucy (12 March 2014). "Ucas sells access to student data for phone and drinks firms' marketing". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  36. ^ "Ucas accused of abusing its position with debt firm advert". The Guardian. 6 September 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2019.

External links edit

  • Official website
    • UCAS Tariff points ("UCAS points") table
  • UK university admissions at Curlie
  • UKPASS – applications service for postgraduate courses
  • UCAS's channel on YouTube
  • UCAStv

ucas, public, research, university, china, university, chinese, academy, sciences, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external. For the public research university in China see University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences For other uses see UCAS disambiguation This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service UCAS ˈ j uː k ae s is a charity 1 and private limited company based in Cheltenham Gloucestershire England which provides educational support services 2 Formed on July 27th 1993 by the merger of the former university admissions system Universities Central Council on Admissions and the former polytechnics admissions system Polytechnics Central Admissions System the company s main role is to operate the application process for British universities and colleges The company is funded by fees charged to applicants and universities as well as advertising income Universities and Colleges Admissions ServiceUCAS logoAbbreviationUCASFormation27 July 1993 30 years ago 1993 07 27 TypePrivate limited companyPurposeEducational support servicesLocationCheltenham Gloucestershire EnglandChief ExecutiveClare MarchantMain organUCAS BoardBudget 33 million 2011 Websitewww wbr ucas wbr comServices provided by UCAS include several online application portals several search tools and free information and advice directed at various audiences including students considering higher education students with pending applications to higher education institutes parents and legal guardians of applicants school and further education college staff involved in helping students apply and providers of higher education universities and HE colleges UCAS is most known for its undergraduate application service the main UCAS scheme however it also operates a number of other admissions services UCAS Conservatoires application and search service for performing arts at the UK conservatoire UCAS Teacher Training UTT for postgraduate teacher training schemes UCAS Postgraduate application and search facility for some postgraduate courses Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Undergraduate admissions schemes 3 1 Main undergraduate scheme 3 1 1 Application 3 1 2 Personal details 3 1 3 Personal statements 3 1 4 Application fees and references 3 1 5 Application deadlines 3 1 6 Offers 3 1 7 Extra 3 1 8 Confirmation and clearing 3 1 9 Adjustment 3 2 UCAS Conservatoires performing arts scheme 4 UCAS postgraduate admissions schemes 4 1 UTT postgraduate teacher training 4 2 UCAS Postgraduate postgraduate admissions scheme 5 Other schemes 5 1 UCAS Progress post 16 education and training admissions scheme 6 UCAS Media 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLocation editUCAS is based near Marle Hill in Cheltenham at the junction of the B4075 New Barn Lane and the A435 Evesham Road near Cheltenham Racecourse and a park and ride 3 It is situated just inside the parish of Prestbury Gloucestershire 4 History editUCAS was formed in 1992 by the merger of Universities Central Council on Admissions UCCA and Polytechnics Central Admissions System PCAS and the name UCAS is a contraction of the former acronyms UCCA and PCAS An early proposal was made for the new merged body to be called PUCCA Polytechnics and Universities Central Council on Admissions but this was never adopted 5 UCCA was the older of the two bodies having been formed in 1961 to provide a clearing house for university applications in the United Kingdom It was created in response to concerns during the 1950s that the increase in University applications was unmanageable using the systems then in place where each student applied individually to as many institutions as they chose This concern led to the Committee of Vice Chancellors and Principals CVCP setting up an ad hoc committee in 1957 to review the matter this committee in its Third Report of January 1961 recommended the setting up of a central agency which subsequently became known as UCCA Its First and Second Reports had already made several recommendations aimed at harmonising admissions procedures across different universities 6 The name UCCA referred originally to the management board the Central Council overseeing the new process but soon came to refer to the organisation responsible for its day to day operation This was based initially in London and moved to Cheltenham Gloucestershire in 1968 The new scheme had a pilot year handling a subset of applications for entry in 1963 and its first full year of operation handled admissions for 1964 7 The scheme was essentially a collaborative venture between independent universities and membership was voluntary Most English universities joined from the start Oxford and Cambridge joined with slightly modified procedures for the 1966 entry the London medical and dental schools as well as Belfast and Stirling for the 1967 In 1965 UCCA handled 80 033 applicants rising to 114 289 in 1969 The acceptance rate of UCCA applicants by universities in 1969 stood at just over 50 8 Initially the processing of applications was carried out using punched card technology In 1964 UCCA started using the services of a computer bureau with a Univac machine in 1967 it installed its own Univac computer Although the polytechnics were degree teaching institutions through the CNAA awards system they were not eligible for admission to UCCA as it was reserved only for universities with degree awarding powers Despite this the Polytechnics were involved as early as 1972 in discussions with UCCA and the Central Register and Clearing House about the possible future shape of one or more admissions systems 9 At this stage applicants dealt directly with each individual polytechnic and the polytechnics themselves were strongly regional or local in their appeal A study in 1977 found that between sixty and seventy per cent of those admitted to a polytechnic had applied to that institution only and that forty percent of admissions to polytechnics resulted from applications made in August or September of the year of entry 9 In 1983 the Committee of Directors of Polytechnics began negotiations with UCCA to share its computing technical and office facilities in Cheltenham to establish a course entrance system based on the existing model used by UCCA 10 A grant of 210 000 from the British Department for Education and Science was awarded to set up a new unified admissions system provisionally called PUCCA 5 However instead of a unified system for both the universities and polytechnics a separate system for polytechnics emerged from the negotiations modelled on UCCA but known as PCAS Applicants to courses were given the option to apply separately for universities or polytechnics or both The PCAS system came into effect in 1985 11 It was led by its first Chief Executive Tony Higgins 12 and in the first year it handled around 140 000 applications to polytechnic courses of whom 40 000 a year went on to study at polytechnics 13 Although many polytechnics offered art and design programmes and some also offered teacher training courses these admissions systems remained outside PCAS 11 Art and Design admissions worked to a later timetable as a result of the role Art Foundation courses had in developing a student s proposed specialism painting sculpture graphic design and so on Work was furthermore generally submitted before a decision was made on whether to interview However means of absorbing the Art and Design Admissions Registry into UCAS were found by 1996 14 Although the aim to create a fully unified application system for universities and polytechnics was not achieved until 1994 from the 80s onwards Tony Higgins the Chief Executive of PCAS continued to push for the merger of PCAS with UCCA 12 In 1992 following the change of status and name of most polytechnics to universities 15 the two bodies combined under Higgins s leadership 12 Initially the application form was branded jointly UCCA PCAS 16 but in 1994 the new merged body was officially renamed UCAS 17 In 2015 the Amsterdam Fashion Academy became the first non UK educational establishment admitted to UCAS 18 19 Undergraduate admissions schemes editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main undergraduate scheme edit Since the vast majority of UK universities and higher education colleges use the UCAS service most students planning to study for an undergraduate degree in the UK must apply through UCAS including home students and international students Application edit To apply to university students must submit a single application via UCAS s online Apply service The application itself requires the student to register to the service giving a buzzword if applying through a centre fill in personal details write a personal statement and choose up to five courses to apply to in no order of preference They must then pay an application fee and obtain a reference before submitting their application online by the appropriate deadline The application is then forwarded by UCAS to the universities and colleges that the students have applied to After following their internal policies which may include an interview the institutions then decide whether to make students an offer of a place An institution can make a student either an unconditional offer where the student is assured a place or a conditional offer where the student will receive a place subject to specific grades being met In certain circumstances the university may withdraw the application before interviews though this usually only occurs by some action on the applicant s part not replying to emails in time for example For applications to universities in the UK entry requirements for individual courses can either be based on grades of qualifications e g AAA at GCE A Level a score of 43 45 in the IB International Baccalaureate Diploma or a music diploma or in UCAS points e g 300 UCAS points from 3 A Levels or an IB score equal to 676 UCAS points To convert individual scores or grades of specific qualifications into UCAS points UCAS has created tariff tables indicating indexes and ratios of UCAS points and results of qualifications 20 For example an A at A level is worth 56 UCAS points an A 48 a B 40 and so on For the IB a score of 45 equals 720 UCAS points a score of 40 is 611 points a score of 35 is 501 etc 21 Personal details edit Once logged into Apply applicants complete a number of personal details including their current qualifications employment criminal history national identity ethnic origin and student finance arrangements Applicants also have the option to declare if they have any individual needs such as any disabilities or if they are a care leaver Personal statements edit The personal statement is an integral part of the application It gives candidates a chance to write about their achievements their interest in the subject they are applying for as well as their suitability interest and commitment to higher education Personal statements can contain a maximum of 4 000 characters including spaces or 47 lines whichever comes first with a maximum of 94 characters per line A research study conducted by UCAS with over 300 000 personal statements of students revealed that the personal statement among the student s grades is the most important part within the application process 22 Plagiarism in personal statements is common 23 and UCAS uses Copycatch software to detect personal statements that are considered to have 30 or more similarity to statements submitted by others 24 The free form nature of the application also lead some applications to complete the essay in an absurdist manner 25 Due to being viewed by some as being rooted in class bias UCAS began phasing out the statement in 2023 with the college class of 2025 being the last one mandated to complete it 26 Application fees and references edit The final part of the process involves paying an application fee and obtaining a written reference The process varies depending on whether a student is applying through a school college or UCAS centre or as an individual For the former applications are sent to the school college or centre who may ask applicants to pay their fee to them which they then pass to UCAS or pay UCAS directly before they provide a reference and submit the form on the student s behalf If applications are sent to the school college or centre then they will attach a reference to send to UCAS Applicants are responsible for ensuring that their school college or centre submits the application before the appropriate deadline for their courses Individual applicants should request their reference from a teacher adviser or professional who knows them before paying the fee and submitting the form themselves For most current applications the cost per student is 22 to apply for a single course or 26 50 for two or more courses as of 2022 entry 27 Application deadlines edit Depending on the subject and on the university that they are applying for candidates must submit their application by the relevant submission deadline to ensure their application is given equal consideration by the higher education providers they are applying to The term equal consideration refers to the obligation on all course providers to consider all applications received by this time equally 28 15 October deadline Those applying for medicine dentistry and veterinary science courses and anyone applying to the universities of Oxford and Cambridge must submit their UCAS applications by 15 October in the year before the student wishes to start their studies 25 January deadline in 2023 The majority of applications must be submitted by 6 p m on 25 January in the calendar year that the student wishes to begin their studies 28 24 March deadline Some art and design courses have a later application deadline 24 March to give applicants time to complete their portfolios It is possible for students to submit applications up until 30 June each year but a late submission may not be given the same consideration as those submitted before the deadline Applications received after 30 June are placed directly into Clearing Offers edit Students must adhere to the appropriate deadline for their course Whilst UCAS advises universities and colleges to send their decisions by the end of March the universities have the responsibility of responding to applicants and may operate in their timescale Many universities like the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge require that applicants come to an interview or be interviewed online before offers are received or they may be asked to submit an additional piece of work before receiving an offer Offers are made through the UCAS Track service by universities and are either unconditional or conditional where the latter means that the student will receive a place dependent on exam performance Applicants also find out if they have been rejected through UCAS Track Once an applicant has received a reply from their choices they must reply to their university before the deadline in May Applicants normally choose two offers through UCAS one as their firm choice and one as their insurance choice A firm choice means that if the student receives the grades required then the student s conditional offer will be confirmed An insurance choice means that if the firm choice is a university that eventually rejects them due to their grades then the student will get into that university if they have met the terms and conditions of the insurance choice s conditions A student may only make an insurance choice if their firm choice is a conditional offer Certain universities have engaged in the dubious practice of making a conditional unconditional offer meaning that a student was advised by the university that they would get an unconditional offer and not then need to meet grade targets but only if they made that university their firm choice This served to guarantee both that the student would have a place and that the place would not be turned down if the student hit the grades required for a better or preferred course This practice was temporarily banned at the height of the COVID 19 pandemic 29 and the UK government discourages universities from giving out these offers 30 Extra edit If an applicant uses all of their five choices and does not receive any offers or they decide to decline the offers they receive they can apply for additional courses using UCAS Extra service This allows them to keep applying one course at a time until they receive an offer they re happy with Extra runs between mid February and the end of June If they do not receive an offer during this time they have the option to enter into Clearing when it opens in July 31 Confirmation and clearing edit When applicants receive their examination results they will know if they have met the conditions of their firm and insurance choices Universities give out unconditional offers and rejections when applicants receive their examination results Those that do have their offers confirmed are invited to accept a place on the course they applied to which is called confirmation Many universities and colleges still accept students that narrowly miss their offer conditions Those that do not meet their firm and insurance offer conditions are eligible to use UCAS Clearing service which enables unplaced students to apply for courses with vacancies directly to the university They do so by searching for an available course using the UCAS search tool and contacting each university or college concerned for a place Although most available places are published following results days in August it opens at the start of July each year and closes in October 32 33 Adjustment edit Through what was known as Adjustment if applicants exceeded the conditions of their firm offer they had the option to search for a place at another university or college while retaining their original offer Adjustment was cancelled in 2022 and is no longer available 32 33 UCAS Conservatoires performing arts scheme edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message UCAS operates Conservatoires UK Admissions Service formally known as CUKAS in conjunction with Conservatoires UK managing applications for both undergraduate and postgraduate music dance and drama courses at nine UK conservatoires Guildhall School of Music and Drama London Leeds Conservatoire Royal Academy of Music London Royal Birmingham Conservatoire part of Birmingham City University Royal College of Music London Royal Northern College of Music Manchester Royal Conservatoire of Scotland Glasgow Royal Welsh College of Music amp Drama Cardiff Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance LondonStudents must apply through the online CUKAS service by 1 October for most music courses 15 January for most undergraduate dance drama and screen production coursesUCAS postgraduate admissions schemes editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message UTT postgraduate teacher training edit UCAS Teacher Training UTT is an application service for postgraduates that want to become teachers UTT replaced UCAS previous GTTR teacher training application service and expanded its remit to provide centralised admissions for School Direct and school centred initial teacher training SCITT programs UTT programmes are either university college taught or school based and typically last for one academic year usually leading to a PGCE qualification Students begin their application in the autumn for programmes starting in the following academic year They start by using Apply 1 which allows them to choose up to three programmes Training providers then have 40 working days to make an offer During this time they will invite candidates they re considering offering a place for an interview At the end of the 40 day period students will have responses from their three choices and will have 10 working days to reply to any offers However if students don t get offered a place using Apply 1 or they choose to decline all of the offers they receive they can use Apply 2 to apply for new places adding one choice at a time until they receive an offer Apply 1 opens on 21 November each year Apply 2 opens on 2 January each yearUCAS Postgraduate postgraduate admissions scheme edit UCAS Postgraduate also known as UK PASS is UCAS postgraduate admissions service It was introduced with the objective to offer students access to over 20 000 courses at 18 participating universities and colleges in England Scotland and Wales both taught and research courses leading to a variety of qualifications including MA MSc MBA and LLM Other schemes editUCAS Progress post 16 education and training admissions scheme edit UCAS has launched UCAS Progress a service enabling GCSE students to search and apply for post 16 work and education based training courses including academic and vocational courses such as A levels and BTECs as well as Apprenticeship and Traineeship programmes 34 The scheme is free for students to use and is implemented as a national service listing post 16 opportunities from all across the UK UCAS Progress also helps schools colleges and local authorities address recruitment issues and statutory obligations resulting from raising the age of participation in secondary education an initiative that legally obliges students to remain in full time education or work based training until the end of the academic year that they turn 17 However this is about to change after government reforms when students will be required to remain in education or training until their 18th birthday UCAS Media editThis section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message UCAS Media is a commercial enterprise that raises money by offering commercial organisations and education providers a channel to communicate with prospective students in effect it sells targeted advertising space UCAS is a non governmental and not for profit company UCAS undergraduate admissions handled almost three million applications from 700 000 UK EU and international students UCAS Media does not disclose information about applicants to its advertising clients However it does send advertisements to applicants on behalf of its clients and can target specific groups such as early adopters or those located in a specific location All UCAS Media profits are fed back into the UCAS charity much of which is gift aided This reduces the fees paid by universities and by applicants for access to the UCAS service UCAS Media has proven controversial among data privacy campaigners In 2014 deputy director of Big Brother Watch Emma Carr was quoted as saying UCAS is perfectly within the law to sell on this information but the way they are doing so as is the situation with most data gathering organisations is underhand It goes far beyond what students would expect them to do with their data Students should be explicitly asked for their permission before UCAS can sell their information on and UCAS should be open and transparent about who it is selling the data on to 35 In 2019 Martin Lewis the consumer finance expert accused UCAS of abusing its position after it allowed a private debt company to promote high interest commercial loans to school leavers UCAS had sent an email promoting loans by Future Finance with interest rates of up to 23 7 well above the current maximum of 5 4 on student loans and worse than most high street credit cards In response UCAS said UCAS is an independent charity This helps us to keep the costs for students applying to university as low as possible 36 See also editCommon Application USA and some colleges in Europe HELOA JUPAS List of UCAS institutions Universities Statistical RecordReferences edit Charity Commission www gov uk government organisations charity commission Retrieved 19 July 2023 THE UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES ADMISSIONS SERVICE overview Find and update company information GOV UK find and update company information service gov uk Retrieved 2 January 2023 SO9524 UCAS New Barn Lane Geograph org uk Retrieved 16 September 2010 Entrance to UCAS C Pauline E geograph org uk Retrieved 22 September 2018 a b Fairhall John 12 January 1984 Admissions streamlining plan for polytechnics The Guardian p 2 Peter Gordon and Denis Lawton Dictionary of British Education London Routledge 2003 p 254 Stewart W 1989 Higher Education in Post war Great Britain London Macmillan p 88 R C Slater University Admissions in The Proceedings of IEEE vol 8 no 3 1970 p 33 a b Kay Ronald UCCA Its Origins and Development 1950 85 UCCA 1985 pp 83 89 Audrey Segal A rationalised confusion in The Guardian UK Newspaper 31 January 1984 p 11 a b Introducing the new Polytechnic Central Admissions System in The Guardian UK Newspaper 11 June 1985 p 11 a b c Sector pays tribute to Higgins champion of access in The Times Higher Education Supplement UK newspaper 23 April 2004 Edward Fennell Horizons Don t blot your copy book The odds are moving back in favor of the applicant for higher education in The Times UK Newspaper 21 September 1987 Editorial Times Higher Education Supplement 9 August 1996 Donald MacLeod Poly genesis Have the new universities lost their ray since they emerged from the old olytechnics in The Guardian UK Newspaper 3 September 2002 Section B p 12 The new joint UCCA PCAS application form in The Guardian UK Newspaper 10 September 1991 Section B p 11 Jonathan Croall Nightmare Scenario in The Guardian UK Newspaper 19 August 1993 Section B p 9 Moore Jessica 10 April 2015 Choosing a university abroad The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 22 September 2018 Ifould Rosie 3 October 2015 Who needs Oxbridge Meet the British students headed for Europe The Guardian Retrieved 22 September 2018 UCAS Tariff Calculating Ucas points based on predicted grades Which university which co uk Retrieved 22 September 2018 Hamill Jasper 22 June 2015 UCAS reveals the secret to writing uni applications passion AND purpose Daily Mirror Retrieved 22 September 2018 Degree applicants copy from web 7 March 2007 Personal statement dos and don ts 19 December 2019 Knowing Cardinal Pell Chaput on anti Francis bishops and the hubris of oyster sexing The Pillar 13 January 2023 Retrieved 18 January 2023 Editor Nicola Woolcock Education Ucas scraps personal statements for university hopefuls The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 18 January 2023 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The 2022 application Latest update UCAS 29 March 2021 a b UCAS 2023 ENTRY DEADLINE FOR ALL UCAS UNDERGRADUATE COURSES EXCEPT THOSE WITH A 15 OCTOBER DEADLINE accessed 20 January 2023 Adams Richard 3 July 2020 Conditional unconditional university offers to be banned in England The Guardian Retrieved 1 February 2023 Middleton Joe 7 March 2022 Universities advised against conditional unconditional admission offers The Guardian Retrieved 1 February 2023 Not holding any offers You might be able to apply for more with Extra UCAS 17 October 2014 Retrieved 26 August 2017 a b Clearing in the UK Study eu a b What is Clearing UCAS 17 October 2014 About us UCAS 22 October 2014 Retrieved 26 August 2017 Ward Lucy 12 March 2014 Ucas sells access to student data for phone and drinks firms marketing The Guardian Retrieved 22 September 2018 Ucas accused of abusing its position with debt firm advert The Guardian 6 September 2019 Retrieved 7 September 2019 External links editOfficial website UCAS Tariff points UCAS points table UK university admissions at Curlie UKPASS applications service for postgraduate courses UCAS s channel on YouTube UCAStv Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title UCAS amp oldid 1219036115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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