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Advance Notice of Higher Education Funding Changes in England – Second Degree Students

If you already have a Higher Education qualification and want to start to study another one at the same (or a lower level) in 2008/09 or in future years then you need to read this

  • Throughout the rest of this note, we call such students “Second Degree Students” but they include all Higher Education qualifications, not just Degrees. This note applies to England.
  • From September 2008, the Government will begin to change the way universities and other higher education providers in England are funded. From that date, taxpayer support in the form of grant from the Higher Education Funding Council to providers to teach most Second Degree students will start to be reduced.
  • Instead the grant will be re-directed to support more people of all ages going to study Higher Education in England for the first time.
  • This is not a cut in funding overall. The Government is redirecting funding to increase the number of students taking first degrees.
  • The changes will be phased in gradually. The pace of change will be fairly slow in 2008/09 with only about £25 million being redistributed which is 0.2% of the total money we give to support Higher Education.

Who is not affected

  • Existing Second Degree students should not be affected, as institutions will continue to receive taxpayer support for them until they complete their studies.
  • Neither should new entrants who study for a second qualification but at a higher level e.g. someone who already has a Foundation Degree and wants to study to get an Honours Degree, or someone who has an Undergraduate Degree and wants to get a Postgraduate Degree. Taxpayer support will be available to institutions to enable them to teach students who are progressing to higher qualifications than the ones they already hold.
  • There will also be exemptions for some subjects where it is in the national interest to have a good supply of graduates – medicine for example. We already make special provision for such graduates to get student support – which is not usually available for students doing second degrees.

Who is affected

  • Other prospective new entrants in 2008/09 studying courses at the same or lower level should contact the Institutions at which they are interested in studying in a few weeks time to see what the position is. The majority of students planning to go next year are still likely to be able to find places although they will need to contact the institution at which they are hoping to study.
  • We recognise that these changes may mean that institutions increase their tuition fees for Second Degrees, although they are not obliged to do so. Tuition Fees can already be set at any level for most categories of Second Degree Students and different institutions may well respond in different ways to the new rules. You may want to look at a number of options before decidin what to do.
  • For some Second Degree students, Career Development Loans might help. These enable individuals to borrow up to £8,000 to pay for vocational courses lasting up to two years. Approximately 25% of CDLs (worth about £20 million) are already taken out to support HE courses, primarily postgraduate courses. However students will need to consider the suitability of the loan scheme very closely in the light of their own individual circumstances. They are not suitable for everyone but they can and do help some students.

Why is the Government doing this?

  • In a nutshell, because we think it is fairer. It should also make a difference to the importance institutions attach to raising skills and to widening participation.
  • At the moment, across the whole of their education, the taxpayer contributes about £100,000 on average to support students who get a second degree, compared with about £55,000 for someone who leaves school at sixteen. In many cases it hard to justify this both to taxpayers and to those who haven’t yet benefited from Higher Education and got a first degree, so we want to change the balance of taxpayer support in favour of first time students.