Lessons in Access
Author
Claire Swales
Access to Higher Education Diploma Officer, QAA
And students who have paid for their course using an Advanced Learner Loan can benefit from a scheme whereby any balance still owed on completion of an eligible higher education course is written off by Student Finance England.
Last October saw the publication of a guide to AHE study written by former AHE student Zoë Chapman. Zoë graduated with a degree in Biochemistry after completing her AHE Diploma – and went on to teach Biology on an Access to Higher Education programme. She has worked in HE, FE and secondary schools, taught on apprenticeship programmes and developed corporate training and CPD provision. She now works as an academic at The Open University.
We at QAA recently conducted a survey of more than 700 current AHE students. Our survey revealed that, prior to the commencement their courses, significant proportions of those prospective learners had felt concerned about the amount of time they would need to commit to their studies.
Those aged 20-34 identified the costs of study and the cost of living as having been key considerations when deciding to return to learning, while those aged over 35 say they had been more focused on the impact their studies would have on their families and their family lives.
It seems significant that the proportion of AHE learners studying part-time peaked at the height of the cost-of-living crisis. This academic year, with inflationary pressures somewhat diminished, this has settled at 42 per cent – the same level as two years ago.
A study by The Open University published last November found that nearly two-thirds of mothers want to retrain for a new career, but money, time and parental responsibilities tend to hold them back. There are clear gender disparities in relation to the capacity and willingness of such returners to learning to engage in full-time study.
This is why it is so vital that Access to HE provision includes part-time routes – as about three-quarters of AHE students are female – just as almost two-thirds of all part-time students in higher education are women.
AHE course providers and their students have discovered the evident benefits of flexible delivery options – whether through part-time study modes, distance or hybrid learning, or alternative start-dates.
Indeed, approximately 180 AHE courses scheduled start dates for early 2025 – across a broad range of subjects including teaching, nursing, law, sports, business, policing, criminology and digital technology.
Part-time study allows learners to take positive steps towards realising their ambitions while working or raising their families – or both.
Providers at all stages of post-compulsory education have seen how opportunities for flexibility in delivery can offer benefits in relation to equality impacts, widening participation, lifelong learning, student recruitment, resilience, retention and attainment.
The lessons we have learned about these benefits mirror an increasing understanding across the tertiary sector of how best to support the engagement of new cohorts of learners with very different expectations and needs from those of previous generations, as post-compulsory education adapts to the challenges and opportunities of a socioeconomically, demographically and technologically new world.