Higher Education Access Tracker
Helping member universities to target,
monitor and evaluate Widening
Participation outreach programmes
Sharon Smith - Director of HEAT
Email: [email protected], Visit: www.heat.ac.uk
Higher Education Access Tracker
Widening Participation and the TEF
• to double the proportion of people from disadvantaged backgrounds entering university
• a whole lifecycle approach to all of these challenges, looking across access, retention, attainment and progression from HE.
• better focused expertise and a coordinated approach to making the most of the expenditure in this area.
• more outreach • to include incentives that reward institutions who do best at
retention and progression of disadvantaged students
HEAT members
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
Canterbury Christ Church University
University of Kent
Brunel University
City University
Goldsmiths University
Imperial College
Kings College
London Metropolitan
Middlesex University
QMUL
Ravensbourne
UCL
University of East London
University of Greenwich
University of West London
Buckinghamshire New University
Oxford Brookes University
University for the Creative Arts
University of Oxford
University of Reading
University of SurreyFalmouth University
University of Plymouth
Leeds Beckett University
Sheffield Hallam University
University of Hull
University of Sheffield
University of York
York St John University
Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts
University of Liverpool
Realising Opportunities
University of Newcastle
University of Northumbria
Southampton Solent University
University of Bournemouth
University of Chichester
University of Portsmouth
University of Southampton
University of Winchester
University Campus Suffolk
Bath Spa University
University of Bath
University of Bristol
University of Exeter
University of Brighton
University of Sussex
University of Cambridge
University of EssexUniversity of WarwickUniversity of Wolverhampton
University of Lancaster
University of Bedfordshire
Reflects membership as at 11th July 2016
University of Chester
University of Northampton
Manchester Metropolitan
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
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H e l p i n g u s e x p l o r e e v i d e n c e o f i m p a c t
Helping to evidence….
How effectively are we targeting outreach to WP students?
To what extent does outreach have an impact on student
attainment at KS4 or KS5?
What is the HE progression rate of outreach students
(compared to their peers)?
When should we start working with students to have the
most impact?
What framework of activities have the most impact on
progression rates?
How do our outreach participants perform in HE compared
to peers?
What is the destinations of outreach participants, post HE?
How has outreach engagement contributed to social
mobility
Higher Education Access Tracker
2017-18 OFFA guidance to universities:
More long-term outreach to increase participation
Nurture deeper relationships with schools & colleges
Working class males
Mature/Part-time students
Increase evidence of impact
Smarter spend
Address differential outcomes
Collaboration
Higher Education Access Tracker
“double the proportion of young people from
disadvantaged backgrounds entering
higher education by the end of the decade”Jo Johnson, Minister
there is evidence to suggest that most of the
“heavy lifting” in widening participation is
being done by less prestigious universities.
Times Education, 2016
It is nothing short of a scandal that the vast majority of work in our universities and colleges aimed at opening doors to students from low and middle income homes is not evaluated properly. We spend millions of pounds a year on
programmes to widen participation and broaden access into our academic elites;
yet we know very little about what impact most of these efforts are having. The Sutton Trust, Lee Eiliot Major
“Lack of rigorous research with RCTs
and controls”
“Faced with cuts, should we spend more on outreach delivery
rather than administering evaluation?”
“suspicions that higher education institutions
would rather data be kept secret as it would expose
their record on fair access”. The Independent 2015
“Work smarter with smarter spend”
OFFA
HEAT History
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
2004-2011 AimhigherSouth East
2011-2013 HEAT
(21 universities)
2014-2017
HEAT project roll-out
2017 –
HEAT self sustaining
Aimhigher legacy database and datasets
Sector owned, developed by the sector
Members with common aims:
Share monitoring and evaluation costs and
avoid duplication
Share best practice and collaborate in
research
Provide fit for purpose tools and information
Building evidence
Targeting
Target Setting
MonitoringEvaluating
Planning
HEAT Outputs
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
• Individual HEI and Collaborative delivery
1
2
3
4
5
6
7Student life
cycle
monitoring
Database
Advisory
• Data repository
• Reporting tool
• DfE
• Data Service (ILR)
• UCAS
• HESA
• School and college profiles
• KS4 and KS5
• UCAS applicant
• KS4 and KS5 trends
• UCAS institution trends
• UCAS track
• HESA track
• Participant profile
• Activity delivery
• Targeting
• Delivery planning
• Monitoring
• Evaluation Reporting
1
Research Observatory
- a common evaluation
framework
2
3
4
5
6
7Student life
cycle
monitoring
Database
Datasets
HEAT track: Participant Tracking
Advisory
HEAT
HEAT Database
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
John MaynardCharlie DarwinMinnie MouseHarry PotterEmma CourageHermoine Granger
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
Input from HEAT HEIs
Learner attitudes
and aspirations
Learner outreach engagement
Learner Characteristics
HEAT track – quantitative measures for longitudinal
analysis, negotiating data
sharing
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
HEAT track – understanding our participants and their progression
Input from HEAT HEIs
Learner attitudes
and aspirations
Learner outreach engagement
Learner Characteristics
Outreach participant
engaged once, aged 15
10 exchanges, first engaged age 11
Engaged with 3 universities, age 13-17
No outreach?
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
HEAT track – understanding our participants and their progression
What happens to outreach participants in terms of progression?
• 30% of the outreach participants we work deliver outreach to in secondary schools go onto to FE colleges to study for a Level 3 qualification:
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
Key findings from HEAT track:
HE progression
National Q1-2 YPR
25%32%
HEAT Q1-2 YPR
HEAT participant success rates
Success, attainment & employment destinations…
Achieved first degree
84%
Achieved 1st or 2:1
64%
HEAT participants [2007-2013]
National average[2010]
Achieved first degree
82%
Achieved 1st or 2:1
65%
Single HE Talk only
…and the value of intensive WP
Achieved 1st / 2:1 (HEAT)
62%
Achieved 1st /2:1 (national)
60%
Moved up from parent NSSEC 4-8 to own NSSEC 1-3
77%
Employment Destinations of HEAT cohort after HE (NS-SEC levels)
Looking at Polar v3 Q1/Q2 only…
Comparing HEAT YPR to the national average [2011/2012]…
29% into HE
Multiple outreach including
summer school40% into HE
Multiple outreach including
Campus Visit34% into HE
Social Mobility
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
HEAT track – understanding our participants and their progression
Contextualise the cohort to understand patterns of progression in relation to engagement
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
• Membership subscription
• Collaborative practice (with members, HEFCE
and OFFA)
• Democratic decision making, the HEAT vote
• Scaling up but maintaining communication
• Continued development of sustainable
membership service – third sector, differentiated
service, HEAT extra?
The Future of HEAT
Higher Education Access Tracker Service
HEAT advice
• Evaluation and proving impact is not without its challenges: collaborate, share
the load and reap the benefits together
• Thank you
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