HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

22
HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects Professor David Eastwood, Chief Executive HEFCE 21 October 2008

description

HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects Professor David Eastwood, Chief Executive HEFCE 21 October 2008. 2004 Letter to HEFCE from Secretary of State: courses that are of national strategic importance, where intervention might be appropriate to enable them to be available - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Page 1: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Professor David Eastwood, Chief Executive HEFCE21 October 2008

Page 2: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

HEFCE sustains Science

Page 3: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Background

2004 Letter to HEFCE from Secretary of State:

• courses that are of national strategic importance, where intervention might be appropriate to enable them to be available

• the types of intervention which could be considered

• core principle that higher education institutions are and must remain autonomous, independent bodies, making their own decisions

Page 4: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Roberts: key 2005 conclusions

– Dynamism of English HE a great strength - interventions should be kept to a minimum.

– Attention focused on subjects both strategically important and vulnerable.

– Government’s role to designate subjects as strategically important and HEFCE’s role to consider whether such subjects are vulnerable and necessary interventions.

– Vulnerability measured by mismatch of supply and demand, or a concentration in institutions which may be vulnerable. Departmental closures do not of themselves mean vulnerability.

Page 5: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

HEFCE action since 2005

£350m programme (2005-06 to 2010-11) includes

– £15m to date for demand-raising and accessibility of HE in chemistry, physics, mathematics and engineering

– additional £100m (2007-08 to 2010-11) to sustain very high cost and vulnerable science provision

– 5,300 ASNs allocated in STEM subjects between 2006 and 2008. And more since eg Coventry – 380 ASNs for FDs and STEM

– £96m (2008-09 to 2010-11) SIVS allocation for ELQ mitigation

– benefits of letting us know about changes in SIVS provision

– Land based Studies review

Page 6: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Land based studies review

– Led by Professor Maggie Gill

– Distinctive nature of provision within three monotechnics

– ‘Many of the of the issues faced by land-based provision are common to a wider spread of higher education provision and can be addressed by the same good management and strategic planning processes’

– £4m for Harper Adams University College to set up the Rural Employer Engagement Development Network in collaboration with the RAC and the Landex group of specialist land-based colleges

Page 7: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Research capacity building and collaboration: STEM subjects

• Developing regional research capacity with RDAs– £4m for Great Western Research; £4m for Midlands

Physics; £10m for Birmingham and Warwick Science City Alliance

• Developing national research capacity with the Research Councils– £4m for integrative mammalian biology; £6m to date

for engineering and physical sciences; £11.2m for language based area studies

Page 8: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Follett: 2008 SIVS reviewSupport for 2005 policy framework plus:

– skills in the workplace – integration of supply and demand measures– recognise complexity and intervene selectively in

specific places: innovation and collaboration, a strongly evidenced case for vulnerability, and national as well as regional enhancement

– LBS should not be considered vulnerable

Welcome progress of demand in STEM subjects

Page 9: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

After LBS review: strategically important and

vulnerable subjects

Science, technology, engineering and mathematics

Area studies and related minority languages

Modern foreign languages

Quantitative social science

Page 10: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

On now to the data: A level entries 2002-2008

• Mathematics entries rose 30% to 57,620; further maths up 88% to 8,440

• Chemistry up 12% to 36,360

• Physics down 11% (although stabilising)

• French down 7% to 12,590

• Other modern languages up 43% to 5,530

Page 11: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

80%

90%

100%

110%

120%

130%

140%

150%

160%

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

100%ChemistryPhysicsGeneral, Civil and Chemical EngineeringAll subjects

UCAS applications 2003 to 2007

Page 12: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

HESA cost centre data 2003-04 to 2006-07

• Home student numbers (all disciplines) rose by 4%

• Home STEM numbers decrease by 2%– Chemistry 21%– Mathematics 8%– Physics -1%– General engineering - 13%– Electrical, electronic & computer engineering -19%

• Languages 11% (includes credits and modules)

Page 13: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Latest from UCAS

UCAS acceptances for 2008-09

(as of 15 Oct)– mathematics has increased by 8.1% to 6,421

compared with 2007-08– chemistry is up 4.4% to 4,004– physics is up 3.3% to 3,325– and engineering averages 6.4% (ranging from 14.9%

for civil engineering to -11.3% for combinations within engineering)

– all subject areas growth is 6.3%

Page 14: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

So what have we learnt (1)?

– Evidence Ltd evaluation of SIVS programme (available under publications at www.hefce.ac.uk)

– projects being delivered in professional and thorough way: value added from working with partners and funders

– growth and importance of applied and cognate areas of science

– one programme to raise STEM demand, rather than several in competition: clearer outcome measures and challenge needed

Page 15: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

We are not alone (1)

International experience: • importance of STEM• advantage of block grant - freedom and security to

invest and disinvest• OECD Education at a glance (2008)

– the number of UK science graduates has increased – and there is a high proportion of science graduates among the young employed.

Page 16: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

We are not alone (2)

Arrow and Capron, Quarterly Journal of Economics 1959

• servant shortage of World War II • ‘Rather than admit that they could not pay the

higher wages necessary to keep help, many individuals found it more felicitous to speak of a ``shortage’’. There is reason to think that at least some of the complaints of shortage in the scientist-engineer market have the same cause’

Page 17: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Wakeham and Physics

• Significant activity to date (Additional T funding and ASNs, Stimulating Physics, Midlands Physics Alliance)

• £12.5m investment in SEPNET out of £25m total

• Working with RCUK on the response to Wakeham:– Continuing to raise demand– Developing TRAC to inform a review of price groups– Exploring the user-led and interdisciplinary dimensions of the

REF– Refining our approach to strategic support

• But remember Roberts on intervention

Page 18: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Future Approach (1)

2007 Sainsbury Review of Science and Innovation:

• ‘HEFCE should transform the SIVS Advisory Group into an Advisory Group on Graduate Supply and Demand….publishing an annual report describing: undergraduate subject trends; recent graduate jobs and salaries; and the subjects where….there are, or are likely shortly to be, shortages of graduates with key skills.’

Page 19: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Future approach (2)

Annual monitoring of trends and further review of vulnerability and policy framework in 2011:

• Peter Saraga appointed chair the new group

• Diverse indicators of graduate demand – SSCs and others

• Events: reviews of tuition fees and price groups, RAE etc…

Page 20: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Graduate Opinion: 2005-06 cohortProportion of graduates who required their subject three and a half

years after graduation (Source: HESA Destination of Leavers Survey)

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Chem

istry

Physic

s, as

trono

my

Engin

eerin

g

Mat

hem

atica

l scie

nces

Land

Bas

ed S

tudie

s

Mod

ern

Foreig

n la

ngua

ges

Med

icine

Bioscie

nces

Pharm

acy &

pha

rmac

olog

y

Compu

ting

& ITS

Med

ia Stu

dies

Page 21: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Graduate Salaries: 2005-06 cohort

Mean salary three and a half years after graduation (Source: HESA Desination of Leavers Survey)

£0

£5,000

£10,000

£15,000

£20,000

£25,000

£30,000

£35,000

£40,000

£45,000

Chem

istry

Physic

s, as

trono

my

Engine

ering

Mat

hem

atica

l scie

nces

Land

Bas

ed S

tudie

s

Mod

ern

Foreig

n lan

guag

es

Med

icine

Bioscie

nces

Pharm

acy &

pha

rmac

ology

Compu

ting

& ITS

Med

ia Stu

dies

Page 22: HEFCE: sustaining science and other key vulnerable subjects

Today’s event

• Help us develop our support for strategically important and vulnerable subjects over the next three years

• Three workshops: • HEFCE's policy towards strategically important and

vulnerable subjects.• Development of an integrated national HE STEM

demand raising programme.• Higher level skills in the workforce and strategically

important and vulnerable subjects