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University of Bristol admissions controversy

The University of Bristol admissions controversy refers to a historic dispute over the admissions process for the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom which occurred in 2003.[2] The 2003 incident was caused by concerns over bias in the admissions system that were perceived as favouritism towards state school students[n 1] after the rejection of some students with strong academic records[3] who attended private schools.[n 2] The university's widening participation policy allowed the awarding of slightly lower offers to promising applicants from schools with lower academic achievement. Controversy surrounding this policy resulted in a brief boycott of the university by some independent schools and intense media debate about the fairness of the admissions policy as well as praise and criticism of the policy and the boycott from politicians, student leaders and education groups. The boycott was lifted after two months when the Independent School's Council expressed satisfaction with the fairness of the admissions system.[4] Two years later a survey of independent schools concluded that: "It is likely that rejections which may have seemed discriminatory to parents and schools have in fact, been due to a large rise in suitably qualified applicants"[5] and independent evidence was compiled suggesting that claims of bias were wildly exaggerated.[6] The controversy has now been superseded by the reality that all British universities have active "widening participation" policies designed to increase university applications from lower-achieving schools which tend, de facto, to be state schools.

Then Commission for Racial Equality head Trevor Phillips criticised the rejection of his daughter who attended the independent Westminster School.[1]

Context edit

Widening participation is a government policy in the United Kingdom which attempts to widen access to higher education by increasing numbers of under-represented groups including ethnic minorities, disabled people and those from lower income families. Widening participation is a strategic aim of the Higher Education Funding Council for England,[7] the body which allocates funding to universities. The Bristol admissions dispute is one of two policial controversies over widening participation that occurred during the 2000s. In 2000 the Laura Spence Affair involved the rejection of a state school student who applied to study medicine at Oxford University and resulted in similar debate about widening participation.[8] Bristol University first introduced a widening participation scheme in 1999 after the Dearing Report,[9] a report which gave recommendations to the government on the expansion and funding of the British higher education system. Bristol's policy was in part a result of this report as well as being a principled attempt by the university to attract applications from state schools, something Bristol has traditionally struggled to do.[10][11]

The aims of the 1999 Participation Strategy were to:

  • Increase applications from students from under-represented groups[12]
  • Put in place an admissions system to enable admissions tutors to identify and make offers to applicants from under-represented groups who have the potential to complete our programmes successfully, with the aim of increasing the number of entrants from such groups[12]
  • Ensure that students from under-represented groups are given the support they need to achieve the learning outcomes and feel comfortable at Bristol, and to encourage integration of students from all backgrounds.[12]

The university's widening participation policy was reviewed in 2001 when a report called The Way Forward set out how the university could meet HEFCE participation targets.[12] Under the access initiative each UCAS application[n 3] to Bristol was examined centrally before being passed to University Departments. Applications from schools where the average A-level grades were less than CCC were "flagged-up" to alert tutors to disadvantage.[9] Bristol's state intake increased from 49.3% in 1998 to 60% in 2003 under the scheme.[13]

Bristol has been described as "one of the most competitive universities to get into".[14] At the time of the controversy the university had the third highest private school intake (only Oxbridge was higher[15]) with only 57% of students coming from state school backgrounds.[16] This has led some to label it elitist.[14] In 2003 it was reported that the university has 39,000 applicants for its 3,300 undergraduate places each year.[3] In 2002 Bristol had 2,000 students were hunting 100 places in history, and 1,500 students of English chasing only 47 places, leading The Guardian to argue that many well qualified students would be disappointed.[17]

Boycott edit

Accusations of bias were first made in 2002 when the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference stated that the admissions procedures for Bristol, Durham, London School of Economics, Manchester, UCL and Edinburgh should be examined for bias.[18]

The boycott of the university was announced on 4 March 2003[19] by the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference and the Girls' Schools Association who expressed concern that the admissions policy could lead to the "apparently arbitrary rejection of well-qualified candidates".[20]

In a joint statement they said:

In these circumstances, we must send a clear message to Bristol. We cannot recommend to our colleagues that they should encourage young people to apply to Bristol until such time as the university can assure us that its procedures are fully documented, fair, objective, transparent and consistently applied.[21]

However, as it is students who decide which Universities to apply to it was not possible for private schools to prevent their students from applying to Bristol, the "boycott" amounted to discouraging their students applying there.[22] The Telegraph described an academic boycott of this kind as "unprecedented".[23] Among the rejected candidates cited as evidence of bias was Rudi Singh a student at King Edward's School. Singh was rejected from Bristol yet accepted to the University of Cambridge.[3] Four students with 10A*s at GCSE and 4 As at A-level were rejected. Two had attended Bedford School.[3] One student, Mark Smith, gained 9 A*s at GCSE and was predicted 3 As at A-level yet had his application rejected.[24] Sushila Phillips, a student at Westminster School, was rejected from Bristol despite gaining a mark of 296 out of 300 in AS level English.[25] Phillips later stated that she did not believe that she had been rejected because she attended Westminster School and that it was important that Bristol had control over its admissions system.[26]

Reaction edit

University of Bristol edit

The university denied any discrimination in the admissions process but reserved the right to take the educational background of students into account when assessing their A-level grades.[27] In a written response to the Independent Schools Council, Vice-Chancellor Eric Thomas stated that the university did not operate a quota system for students from any particular school or social background:

The university does not practice unfair discrimination, it [Bristol] does not operate quotas and it will continue to recruit exceptionally able students from all backgrounds through a selection process that is as fair and straightforward as we can make it. Pupils, not schools, make the decisions about which universities to apply to and we are confident that they will continue to want to study at Bristol.[28]

The university highlighted the fact that it is one of the most popular in the country with over 39,000 students for 3,000 places in 2002.[27] In History, English, Economics and Law competition is so fierce that over 30 students can be competing for one place.[28] In English there were 47 places and 1500 applicants of whom 500 had a perfect A-level score of AAA at A2, meaning that many top candidates were rejected.[29]

Eric Thomas also emphasised the work the university was doing to "reach out" beyond the middle-classes. In a BBC interview he stated:

a huge raft of initiatives have been implemented. Things like summer schools in which we bring students to the university during the summer to see it, we have relationships with local schools and further education colleges.[16]

The University of Bristol stated that it is against any kind of discrimination in the admissions process[30] and that the policy of making lower offers to exceptional students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds was not to satisfy the government or gain funding:

There is no question of the University attempting to widen participation in order to gain Government cash. Bristol agreed its widening participation strategy in 1998 - long before widening participation became part of Government policy. Work in this field is resource-intensive and funding from the Government helps to cover the costs. The University is not motivated by money but by the desire to recruit the best students and by the recognition that if it is to act fairly and avoid missing out on some of the most able people, it must have regard to factors in addition to predicted A-level grades.[28]

Newspapers reported that the admissions controversy created tensions between state and private school pupils at the university. Gus Glover a candidate who lost that year's University of Bristol Union presidential election attributed his loss to supporting the admissions policy.[31] However, residents of Wills Hall wrote letters to the newspaper defending the hall against accusations of classism.[32]

Head teachers edit

The National Association of Head Teachers, a trade union which represents head teachers in the United Kingdom[33] stated that the "HMC and GSA are guilty of gesture politics of the worst kind... They are merely shooting themselves in the foot by pursuing a boycott".[21]

Media commentators edit

The Daily Express criticised the admissions policies in their headlines.[17] The Daily Express stated "More students being turned down for being middle class".[17]

The then-head of the Commission for Racial Equality Trevor Phillips expressed surprise that his daughter had been rejected. In The Times he stated "Though I have no disagreement with greater access, I would have hoped universities and the government would have a slightly more sophisticated policy than simply 'blacklisting' independent schools".[34]

Politicians edit

Prime Minister Tony Blair commented on the controversy, stating that university should grant places on the basis of merit rather than class.[35] He added that he wanted to see more working-class people in higher education[36] but was forced to backtrack from comments made by Margaret Hodge which argued that Universities such as Bristol should be set formal targets for widening access.[36]

Charles Clarke, then the Education Secretary, described independent school criticisms as "ill-informed brouhaha".[37] He also stated that it would be inappropriate for government to become too involved in university admissions.[38] The then Shadow Education Secretary Damian Green accused the government of trying to "fiddle admissions for political ends".[39] Liberal Democrat MP Phil Willis said that "social engineering is coming ahead of merit and the development of talent."[36]

Sir Howard Newby chief-executive of the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), the university funding body argued that Bristol's admissions policies were fair and accused sections of the media of becoming involved in a "moral panic" over positive discrimination.[40]

Resolution edit

The controversy resulted in applications to Bristol falling for the first time in a decade in the 2004/05 admissions cycle.[41] Application numbers fell by 5% although Bristol downplayed this attributing the decrease to random fluctuations in the level of applications.[42][43] The boycott ended on 29 April 2003 when the chairman of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference expressed satisfaction with the admissions policy for Bristol.[4] In response to the controversy the university introduced a new, more transparent admissions policy.[44] In 2005, the Independent Schools Council published a report which cleared Bristol of bias.[5][45][46][47] The report surveyed applications by 20,000 private school pupils and found that in 60 of 300 courses surveyed 98% of private school pupils were offered a place.[47]

Subsequent developments edit

Year State intake (%)
2002/3 63.8
2003/4 65.2
2004/5 64.1
2005/6 65.1
2006/7 63.1
2007/8 61.5
2008/09 61.5
2009/10 60.9
2010/11 60.2[48]
2011/12 59.9[48]

In 2009 Bristol rejected giving a "head start" to applicants to disadvantaged backgrounds as part of a scheme proposed by Lord Mandelson.[49] Statistics available from the Higher Education Statistics Agency published in 2008 show that Bristol's state intake stood at 63.1% a decrease from 65.1% the previous year.[50] Data from 2009/2010 shows Bristol's intake from state schools and colleges to be 60.0%[51] an identical figure to 2003 when the controversy over admissions occurred.[52]

In 2012 the university introduced a points based admissions system whereby poorer students “will be given an automatic weighting to their total academic score”.[53] During the 2012/13 admissions cycle all undergraduate courses used some form of contextual data but the university has refused to state exactly how their scoring system works.[53]

In 2013 the head of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference Chris Ramsay said that independent schools could consider a repeat of the 2003 'boycott' if access agreements agreed by the Office for Fair Access led to systematic discrimination against applicants from independent schools.

“We can influence [universities’] behaviour by advising good students to go or not to go to them, and that’s obviously something that I suspect is very relevant to them...There was a period just under a decade ago where we in independent schools advised students not to apply to Bristol and they didn’t like that. It definitely had an impact. If in the end we felt that a university was systematically operating its admissions in a way which was disadvantaging the candidates for whom in the end we speak, we might say that.”[54]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the United Kingdom a state school is a government funded school which provides education free of charge to pupils. In official literature they are known as maintained schools and include a wide variety of schools including faith based schools and grammar schools. All schools which are not state schools are independent schools. See State school.
  2. ^ In the United Kingdom a public school refers to a privately funded school funded by the payment of tuition fees. The terms "private school", "public school" and "independent school" are used fairly interchangeably to refer to fee paying school which operate free of the state although "public school" is usually reserved for the leading fee charging independent schools. In the United States the term public school refers to government funded schools. See Public school.
  3. ^ In the United Kingdom, applicants apply to University through the Universities & Colleges Admissions Service. Offers to study may be awarded and these are either conditional on exam performance (e.g. an offer of AAA at A-level) or unconditional. If an applicant does not meet their offer then a University may reject an applicant. A University need not make the same level of offer to all applicants. See UCAS

References edit

  1. ^ MacLeod, Donald (10 March 2003). "Bristol rebuts bias claims by CRE head". The Guardian. London.
  2. ^ "Funding chief backs Bristol in access row | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. 5 March 2003. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d "UK | Bristol denies admissions bias". BBC News. 26 February 2003. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Private schools lift Bristol ban". The Guardian. London. 29 April 2003. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  5. ^ a b Curtis, Polly (17 August 2005). "Private schools admit no bias in university selection | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  6. ^ Garner, Richard (25 March 2003). "Bias against private pupils at Bristol is 'wildly exaggerated' - Education News, Education". The Independent. London. Retrieved 25 August 2009.[dead link]
  7. ^ . HEFCE. 2 October 2009. Archived from the original on 24 September 2010. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  8. ^ Hodges, Lucy (8 June 2000). . The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 11 April 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  9. ^ a b . The Independent. London. 6 March 2003. Archived from the original on 20 November 2009. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  10. ^ Prof Eric Thomas, Bristol University (18 January 2002). "UK | Elite uni aims to broaden its appeal". BBC News. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  11. ^ Shepherd, Jessica (3 February 2009). "White, middle-class families dominate top university places | Education". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  12. ^ a b c d "University of Bristol". www.bristol.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 September 2010.[dead link]
  13. ^ "Bristol 'proud' of state pupil surge". Times Higher Education. 28 February 2003. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  14. ^ a b "Elite uni aims to broaden its appeal". BBC News. 18 January 2002. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  15. ^ Hooper, Dickon (26 June 2003). "Student hopefuls descend on Bristol". BBC News. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  16. ^ a b "Elite uni aims to broaden its appeal". BBC News. 18 January 2002. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  17. ^ a b c "Leader: Admission charges | Politics". The Guardian. London. 4 March 2003. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  18. ^ "Private schools claim university bias". BBC News. 30 September 2002. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  19. ^ Rebecca Smithers, education correspondent (5 March 2003). "Private schools boycott Bristol over selection | UK news". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  20. ^ "Bristol faces boycott over admissions row". The Guardian. London. 4 March 2003. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  21. ^ a b Gibbes, Edward (9 March 2003). "Whose university place is it anyway?". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  22. ^ "UK | Private schools 'boycott' Bristol". BBC News. 4 March 2003. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  23. ^ Lightfoot, Liz (5 March 2003). "Private schools in Bristol boycott". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  24. ^ "Bristol accused of state school bias | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. 25 February 2003. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  25. ^ Syal, Rajeev (9 March 2003). "Race equality chairman's daughter is refused admission 'because she went to private school'". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  26. ^ Phillips, Sushila (16 March 2003). "Trust the system". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  27. ^ a b "Bristol attacks admissions 'fallacy' | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. 4 March 2003. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  28. ^ a b c Bristol University | News from the University | Admissions policy
  29. ^ Fox, Adam (20 March 2003). "A silent revolution | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  30. ^ "Bristol remains firm on admissions". BBC News. 23 June 2003. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  31. ^ Hill, Amelia (9 March 2003). "Inside a university challenged". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  32. ^ "Positive discrimination? Don't insult me". The Guardian. London. 16 March 2003. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  33. ^ . Naht.org.uk. Archived from the original on 15 August 2009. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  34. ^ MacLeod, Donald (10 March 2003). "Bristol rebuts bias claims by CRE head". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  35. ^ Smithers, Rebecca (6 March 2003). "Clarke attacks Bristol boycott | Politics". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  36. ^ a b c "Blair wades into university row". London Evening Standard. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  37. ^ MacLeod, Donald (5 March 2003). "Clarke dismisses 'brouhaha' over Bristol admissions | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  38. ^ MacLeod, Donald (5 March 2003). "Clarke dismisses 'brouhaha' over Bristol admissions". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  39. ^ Gibbes, Edward (10 March 2003). "Whose university place is it anyway?". The Guardian. London.
  40. ^ "Update: 14:25". Times Higher Education. 5 March 2003. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  41. ^ Nikkhah, Roya (20 February 2004). "University feels pinch after boycott by schools". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  42. ^ Nikkhah, Roya (20 February 2004). "University feels pinch after boycott by schools". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  43. ^ "Is the Bristol boycott biting?". Studentadviser.net. 31 January 2004. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  44. ^ Smithers, Rebecca (20 June 2003). "College to revise admissions policy | UK news". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  45. ^ "UK | 'No bias' against private pupils". BBC News. 17 August 2005. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  46. ^ "No bias against independent sector applicants by elite institutions, survey finds". Times Higher Education. 19 August 2005. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  47. ^ a b . Isc.co.uk. 17 August 2005. Archived from the original on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
  48. ^ a b Paton, Graeme (21 March 2013). "Half of top universities 'cut state school admissions'". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  49. ^ kmccormick. . Thisisbristol.co.uk. Archived from the original on 9 November 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  50. ^ Frean, Alexandra (5 June 2008). . Times. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  51. ^ Rogers, Simon (16 April 2010). "How many people from state school go to your university? | The Guardian". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  52. ^ "Bristol 'proud' of state pupil surge". Times Higher Education. 28 February 2003. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  53. ^ a b Henry, Julie (5 August 2012). "Universities accused of socially engineering intakes". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  54. ^ Paton, Graeme (1 October 2012). "Public schools threaten university boycott". The Daily Telegraph. London.

Further reading edit

  • Bibbings,Lois S, Widening Participation and Higher Education, Journal of Law and Society, Vol. 33, No. 1, pp. 74–91, March 2006,

External links edit

  • Widening Participation at Bristol

university, bristol, admissions, controversy, refers, historic, dispute, over, admissions, process, university, bristol, united, kingdom, which, occurred, 2003, 2003, incident, caused, concerns, over, bias, admissions, system, that, were, perceived, favouritis. The University of Bristol admissions controversy refers to a historic dispute over the admissions process for the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom which occurred in 2003 2 The 2003 incident was caused by concerns over bias in the admissions system that were perceived as favouritism towards state school students n 1 after the rejection of some students with strong academic records 3 who attended private schools n 2 The university s widening participation policy allowed the awarding of slightly lower offers to promising applicants from schools with lower academic achievement Controversy surrounding this policy resulted in a brief boycott of the university by some independent schools and intense media debate about the fairness of the admissions policy as well as praise and criticism of the policy and the boycott from politicians student leaders and education groups The boycott was lifted after two months when the Independent School s Council expressed satisfaction with the fairness of the admissions system 4 Two years later a survey of independent schools concluded that It is likely that rejections which may have seemed discriminatory to parents and schools have in fact been due to a large rise in suitably qualified applicants 5 and independent evidence was compiled suggesting that claims of bias were wildly exaggerated 6 The controversy has now been superseded by the reality that all British universities have active widening participation policies designed to increase university applications from lower achieving schools which tend de facto to be state schools Then Commission for Racial Equality head Trevor Phillips criticised the rejection of his daughter who attended the independent Westminster School 1 Contents 1 Context 2 Boycott 3 Reaction 3 1 University of Bristol 3 2 Head teachers 3 3 Media commentators 3 4 Politicians 4 Resolution 5 Subsequent developments 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksContext editWidening participation is a government policy in the United Kingdom which attempts to widen access to higher education by increasing numbers of under represented groups including ethnic minorities disabled people and those from lower income families Widening participation is a strategic aim of the Higher Education Funding Council for England 7 the body which allocates funding to universities The Bristol admissions dispute is one of two policial controversies over widening participation that occurred during the 2000s In 2000 the Laura Spence Affair involved the rejection of a state school student who applied to study medicine at Oxford University and resulted in similar debate about widening participation 8 Bristol University first introduced a widening participation scheme in 1999 after the Dearing Report 9 a report which gave recommendations to the government on the expansion and funding of the British higher education system Bristol s policy was in part a result of this report as well as being a principled attempt by the university to attract applications from state schools something Bristol has traditionally struggled to do 10 11 The aims of the 1999 Participation Strategy were to Increase applications from students from under represented groups 12 Put in place an admissions system to enable admissions tutors to identify and make offers to applicants from under represented groups who have the potential to complete our programmes successfully with the aim of increasing the number of entrants from such groups 12 Ensure that students from under represented groups are given the support they need to achieve the learning outcomes and feel comfortable at Bristol and to encourage integration of students from all backgrounds 12 The university s widening participation policy was reviewed in 2001 when a report called The Way Forward set out how the university could meet HEFCE participation targets 12 Under the access initiative each UCAS application n 3 to Bristol was examined centrally before being passed to University Departments Applications from schools where the average A level grades were less than CCC were flagged up to alert tutors to disadvantage 9 Bristol s state intake increased from 49 3 in 1998 to 60 in 2003 under the scheme 13 Bristol has been described as one of the most competitive universities to get into 14 At the time of the controversy the university had the third highest private school intake only Oxbridge was higher 15 with only 57 of students coming from state school backgrounds 16 This has led some to label it elitist 14 In 2003 it was reported that the university has 39 000 applicants for its 3 300 undergraduate places each year 3 In 2002 Bristol had 2 000 students were hunting 100 places in history and 1 500 students of English chasing only 47 places leading The Guardian to argue that many well qualified students would be disappointed 17 Boycott editAccusations of bias were first made in 2002 when the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference stated that the admissions procedures for Bristol Durham London School of Economics Manchester UCL and Edinburgh should be examined for bias 18 The boycott of the university was announced on 4 March 2003 19 by the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference and the Girls Schools Association who expressed concern that the admissions policy could lead to the apparently arbitrary rejection of well qualified candidates 20 In a joint statement they said In these circumstances we must send a clear message to Bristol We cannot recommend to our colleagues that they should encourage young people to apply to Bristol until such time as the university can assure us that its procedures are fully documented fair objective transparent and consistently applied 21 However as it is students who decide which Universities to apply to it was not possible for private schools to prevent their students from applying to Bristol the boycott amounted to discouraging their students applying there 22 The Telegraph described an academic boycott of this kind as unprecedented 23 Among the rejected candidates cited as evidence of bias was Rudi Singh a student at King Edward s School Singh was rejected from Bristol yet accepted to the University of Cambridge 3 Four students with 10A s at GCSE and 4 As at A level were rejected Two had attended Bedford School 3 One student Mark Smith gained 9 A s at GCSE and was predicted 3 As at A level yet had his application rejected 24 Sushila Phillips a student at Westminster School was rejected from Bristol despite gaining a mark of 296 out of 300 in AS level English 25 Phillips later stated that she did not believe that she had been rejected because she attended Westminster School and that it was important that Bristol had control over its admissions system 26 Reaction editUniversity of Bristol edit The university denied any discrimination in the admissions process but reserved the right to take the educational background of students into account when assessing their A level grades 27 In a written response to the Independent Schools Council Vice Chancellor Eric Thomas stated that the university did not operate a quota system for students from any particular school or social background The university does not practice unfair discrimination it Bristol does not operate quotas and it will continue to recruit exceptionally able students from all backgrounds through a selection process that is as fair and straightforward as we can make it Pupils not schools make the decisions about which universities to apply to and we are confident that they will continue to want to study at Bristol 28 The university highlighted the fact that it is one of the most popular in the country with over 39 000 students for 3 000 places in 2002 27 In History English Economics and Law competition is so fierce that over 30 students can be competing for one place 28 In English there were 47 places and 1500 applicants of whom 500 had a perfect A level score of AAA at A2 meaning that many top candidates were rejected 29 Eric Thomas also emphasised the work the university was doing to reach out beyond the middle classes In a BBC interview he stated a huge raft of initiatives have been implemented Things like summer schools in which we bring students to the university during the summer to see it we have relationships with local schools and further education colleges 16 The University of Bristol stated that it is against any kind of discrimination in the admissions process 30 and that the policy of making lower offers to exceptional students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds was not to satisfy the government or gain funding There is no question of the University attempting to widen participation in order to gain Government cash Bristol agreed its widening participation strategy in 1998 long before widening participation became part of Government policy Work in this field is resource intensive and funding from the Government helps to cover the costs The University is not motivated by money but by the desire to recruit the best students and by the recognition that if it is to act fairly and avoid missing out on some of the most able people it must have regard to factors in addition to predicted A level grades 28 Newspapers reported that the admissions controversy created tensions between state and private school pupils at the university Gus Glover a candidate who lost that year s University of Bristol Union presidential election attributed his loss to supporting the admissions policy 31 However residents of Wills Hall wrote letters to the newspaper defending the hall against accusations of classism 32 Head teachers edit The National Association of Head Teachers a trade union which represents head teachers in the United Kingdom 33 stated that the HMC and GSA are guilty of gesture politics of the worst kind They are merely shooting themselves in the foot by pursuing a boycott 21 Media commentators edit The Daily Express criticised the admissions policies in their headlines 17 The Daily Express stated More students being turned down for being middle class 17 The then head of the Commission for Racial Equality Trevor Phillips expressed surprise that his daughter had been rejected In The Times he stated Though I have no disagreement with greater access I would have hoped universities and the government would have a slightly more sophisticated policy than simply blacklisting independent schools 34 Politicians edit Prime Minister Tony Blair commented on the controversy stating that university should grant places on the basis of merit rather than class 35 He added that he wanted to see more working class people in higher education 36 but was forced to backtrack from comments made by Margaret Hodge which argued that Universities such as Bristol should be set formal targets for widening access 36 Charles Clarke then the Education Secretary described independent school criticisms as ill informed brouhaha 37 He also stated that it would be inappropriate for government to become too involved in university admissions 38 The then Shadow Education Secretary Damian Green accused the government of trying to fiddle admissions for political ends 39 Liberal Democrat MP Phil Willis said that social engineering is coming ahead of merit and the development of talent 36 Sir Howard Newby chief executive of the Higher Education Funding Council for England HEFCE the university funding body argued that Bristol s admissions policies were fair and accused sections of the media of becoming involved in a moral panic over positive discrimination 40 Resolution editThe controversy resulted in applications to Bristol falling for the first time in a decade in the 2004 05 admissions cycle 41 Application numbers fell by 5 although Bristol downplayed this attributing the decrease to random fluctuations in the level of applications 42 43 The boycott ended on 29 April 2003 when the chairman of the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference expressed satisfaction with the admissions policy for Bristol 4 In response to the controversy the university introduced a new more transparent admissions policy 44 In 2005 the Independent Schools Council published a report which cleared Bristol of bias 5 45 46 47 The report surveyed applications by 20 000 private school pupils and found that in 60 of 300 courses surveyed 98 of private school pupils were offered a place 47 Subsequent developments editYear State intake 2002 3 63 8 2003 4 65 2 2004 5 64 1 2005 6 65 1 2006 7 63 1 2007 8 61 5 2008 09 61 5 2009 10 60 9 2010 11 60 2 48 2011 12 59 9 48 In 2009 Bristol rejected giving a head start to applicants to disadvantaged backgrounds as part of a scheme proposed by Lord Mandelson 49 Statistics available from the Higher Education Statistics Agency published in 2008 show that Bristol s state intake stood at 63 1 a decrease from 65 1 the previous year 50 Data from 2009 2010 shows Bristol s intake from state schools and colleges to be 60 0 51 an identical figure to 2003 when the controversy over admissions occurred 52 In 2012 the university introduced a points based admissions system whereby poorer students will be given an automatic weighting to their total academic score 53 During the 2012 13 admissions cycle all undergraduate courses used some form of contextual data but the university has refused to state exactly how their scoring system works 53 In 2013 the head of the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference Chris Ramsay said that independent schools could consider a repeat of the 2003 boycott if access agreements agreed by the Office for Fair Access led to systematic discrimination against applicants from independent schools We can influence universities behaviour by advising good students to go or not to go to them and that s obviously something that I suspect is very relevant to them There was a period just under a decade ago where we in independent schools advised students not to apply to Bristol and they didn t like that It definitely had an impact If in the end we felt that a university was systematically operating its admissions in a way which was disadvantaging the candidates for whom in the end we speak we might say that 54 Notes edit In the United Kingdom a state school is a government funded school which provides education free of charge to pupils In official literature they are known as maintained schools and include a wide variety of schools including faith based schools and grammar schools All schools which are not state schools are independent schools See State school In the United Kingdom a public school refers to a privately funded school funded by the payment of tuition fees The terms private school public school and independent school are used fairly interchangeably to refer to fee paying school which operate free of the state although public school is usually reserved for the leading fee charging independent schools In the United States the term public school refers to government funded schools See Public school In the United Kingdom applicants apply to University through the Universities amp Colleges Admissions Service Offers to study may be awarded and these are either conditional on exam performance e g an offer of AAA at A level or unconditional If an applicant does not meet their offer then a University may reject an applicant A University need not make the same level of offer to all applicants See UCASReferences edit MacLeod Donald 10 March 2003 Bristol rebuts bias claims by CRE head The Guardian London Funding chief backs Bristol in access row The Guardian The Guardian London 5 March 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2009 a b c d UK Bristol denies admissions bias BBC News 26 February 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2009 a b Private schools lift Bristol ban The Guardian London 29 April 2003 Retrieved 27 May 2010 a b Curtis Polly 17 August 2005 Private schools admit no bias in university selection The Guardian The Guardian London Retrieved 31 August 2009 Garner Richard 25 March 2003 Bias against private pupils at Bristol is wildly exaggerated Education News Education The Independent London Retrieved 25 August 2009 dead link Widening participation HEFCE 2 October 2009 Archived from the original on 24 September 2010 Retrieved 19 September 2010 Hodges Lucy 8 June 2000 Lies damned lies and Laura Spence Education News Education The Independent London Archived from the original on 11 April 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2009 a b Does Bristol pick the best Higher Education The Independent London 6 March 2003 Archived from the original on 20 November 2009 Retrieved 31 August 2009 Prof Eric Thomas Bristol University 18 January 2002 UK Elite uni aims to broaden its appeal BBC News Retrieved 31 August 2009 Shepherd Jessica 3 February 2009 White middle class families dominate top university places Education The Guardian London Retrieved 31 August 2009 a b c d University of Bristol www bristol ac uk Retrieved 19 September 2010 dead link Bristol proud of state pupil surge Times Higher Education 28 February 2003 Retrieved 31 August 2009 a b Elite uni aims to broaden its appeal BBC News 18 January 2002 Retrieved 27 May 2010 Hooper Dickon 26 June 2003 Student hopefuls descend on Bristol BBC News Retrieved 27 May 2010 a b Elite uni aims to broaden its appeal BBC News 18 January 2002 Retrieved 27 May 2010 a b c Leader Admission charges Politics The Guardian London 4 March 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2009 Private schools claim university bias BBC News 30 September 2002 Retrieved 27 May 2010 Rebecca Smithers education correspondent 5 March 2003 Private schools boycott Bristol over selection UK news The Guardian London Retrieved 19 September 2010 Bristol faces boycott over admissions row The Guardian London 4 March 2003 Retrieved 27 May 2010 a b Gibbes Edward 9 March 2003 Whose university place is it anyway The Guardian London Retrieved 27 May 2010 UK Private schools boycott Bristol BBC News 4 March 2003 Retrieved 31 August 2009 Lightfoot Liz 5 March 2003 Private schools in Bristol boycott The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 27 May 2010 Bristol accused of state school bias The Guardian The Guardian London 25 February 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2009 Syal Rajeev 9 March 2003 Race equality chairman s daughter is refused admission because she went to private school The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 31 August 2009 Phillips Sushila 16 March 2003 Trust the system The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 27 May 2010 a b Bristol attacks admissions fallacy The Guardian The Guardian London 4 March 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2009 a b c Bristol University News from the University Admissions policy Fox Adam 20 March 2003 A silent revolution The Guardian The Guardian London Retrieved 31 August 2009 Bristol remains firm on admissions BBC News 23 June 2003 Retrieved 27 May 2010 Hill Amelia 9 March 2003 Inside a university challenged The Guardian London Retrieved 27 May 2010 Positive discrimination Don t insult me The Guardian London 16 March 2003 Retrieved 27 May 2010 NAHT About NAHT Naht org uk Archived from the original on 15 August 2009 Retrieved 31 August 2009 MacLeod Donald 10 March 2003 Bristol rebuts bias claims by CRE head The Guardian London Retrieved 27 May 2010 Smithers Rebecca 6 March 2003 Clarke attacks Bristol boycott Politics The Guardian London Retrieved 25 August 2009 a b c Blair wades into university row London Evening Standard Retrieved 25 August 2009 MacLeod Donald 5 March 2003 Clarke dismisses brouhaha over Bristol admissions The Guardian The Guardian London Retrieved 25 August 2009 MacLeod Donald 5 March 2003 Clarke dismisses brouhaha over Bristol admissions The Guardian London Retrieved 27 May 2010 Gibbes Edward 10 March 2003 Whose university place is it anyway The Guardian London Update 14 25 Times Higher Education 5 March 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2009 Nikkhah Roya 20 February 2004 University feels pinch after boycott by schools The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 27 May 2010 Nikkhah Roya 20 February 2004 University feels pinch after boycott by schools The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 27 May 2010 Is the Bristol boycott biting Studentadviser net 31 January 2004 Retrieved 25 August 2009 Smithers Rebecca 20 June 2003 College to revise admissions policy UK news The Guardian London Retrieved 31 August 2009 UK No bias against private pupils BBC News 17 August 2005 Retrieved 31 August 2009 No bias against independent sector applicants by elite institutions survey finds Times Higher Education 19 August 2005 Retrieved 31 August 2009 a b Independent Private Schools Independent Schools Council Isc co uk 17 August 2005 Archived from the original on 20 November 2008 Retrieved 31 August 2009 a b Paton Graeme 21 March 2013 Half of top universities cut state school admissions The Daily Telegraph London kmccormick Bristol University admissions Bristol news Thisisbristol co uk Archived from the original on 9 November 2009 Retrieved 19 September 2010 Frean Alexandra 5 June 2008 Fewer state school students at top universities despite costly campaigns Times Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 17 October 2015 Rogers Simon 16 April 2010 How many people from state school go to your university The Guardian The Guardian London Retrieved 19 September 2010 Bristol proud of state pupil surge Times Higher Education 28 February 2003 Retrieved 19 September 2010 a b Henry Julie 5 August 2012 Universities accused of socially engineering intakes The Daily Telegraph London Paton Graeme 1 October 2012 Public schools threaten university boycott The Daily Telegraph London Further reading editBibbings Lois S Widening Participation and Higher Education Journal of Law and Society Vol 33 No 1 pp 74 91 March 2006 External links editThe new University of Bristol admissions policy Widening Participation at Bristol Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Bristol admissions controversy amp oldid 1222592129, wikipedia, wiki, 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