Jim is an Associate Editor (SUs) at Wonkhe

In her letter to the sector last November, Secretary of State Bridget Phillipson said that she expects universities to play a stronger role in expanding access and improving outcomes for disadvantaged students.

Her letter noted that the gap in outcomes from higher education between disadvantaged students and others is unacceptably large and is widening, with participation from disadvantaged students in decline for the first time in two decades.

She’s referring to the Free School Meals (FSM) eligible HE progression rate – 29 percent in 2022/23, down for the first time in the series.

Of course in 2023/24, or this year, the numbers for FSM and any number of other factors could be much worse – but on the current schedule, we won’t be seeing an update to OfS’ access and participation data dashboard until “summer or autumn 2025”, and even then only for 2023/24.

If you’re prepared to brave the long loading times – which for me generate a similar level of frustration to that I used to experience watching Eurovision national finals 20 years ago – you can drill down into that dashboard by provider.

It’s a mixed picture, with a lot of splits to choose from. But what the data doesn’t tell us is how providers are doing when compared to their signed off targets in their (mainly 2020/21 to 2024/25) access and participation plans.

The last time OfS published any monitoring data was for the 2020-21 academic year – almost three years ago, in September 2022.

That means that we can’t see how well providers are doing against their targets, and nor do we have any sense of any action that OfS may (or may not) have taken to tackle underperformance.

So I decided to have a go. I restricted my analysis to the Russell Group, and extracted all of the targets from the 2020/21 to 2024/25 plans that were measurable via the dashboard.

I then compared the 2022/23 performance with the relevant milestone, and with the original baseline. Where the target was unclear on what type of student was in scope, I assumed FT, first degree students.

The results are pretty worrying.

Baseline2022-23 Milestone2022-23 ActualBehind milestone?Behind baseline?
PROGDisabledPercentage difference in progression to employment and further study between disabled and non-disabled.3.002.000.10NN
PROGEthnicityPercentage difference in graduate employability between white and black students7.94.70-2.50NN
CONTDisabledPercentage difference in non-continuation rates non-disabled and students with mental health conditions7.005.501.80NN
CONTDisabledPercentage difference in continuation rates between disabled students and non-disabled students.6.431.3NN
CONTLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Percentage difference in non-continuation rates between POLAR4 quintile 5 and quintile 1 students.53.52.3NN
CONTLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Percentage difference in non-continuation rates between POLAR4 quintile 5 and quintile 1 students.42.53.40YN
CONTLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Close the gap in non-continuation between POLAR 4 Q1 and Q5 undergraduate students from 3.8% in 2016/2017 to 1.5% in 2024/253.836.4YY
CONTLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)POLAR4 Q1 non-continuation gap v Q5 (relates to KPM3)43.256.1YY
CONTLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Percentage difference in non-continuation rates between POLAR4 quintile 5 and quintile 1 students2.401.006.90YY
CONTLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Percentage difference in continuation rates between the most (POLAR Q5) and least (POLAR Q1) representative groups.2.41.53.1YY
CONTMaturePercentage point difference in non-continuation rates between young (under 21) and mature (21 and over) students.1096.8NN
CONTMaturePercentage difference in continuation rates of mature first degree entrants when compared to young students.10.27-0.4NN
CONTMatureSignificantly raise the percentage of our intake from mature students5.907.004.10NY
CONTMaturePercentage difference in non-continuation rates mature and non-mature students9.006.007.40YN
CONTMaturePercentage difference in non-continuation rates between mature (aged 21+) and young (aged <21) students.8.005.005.10YN
CONTMATUREClose the gap in non-continuation between young and mature full-time, first degree students from 7.8% in 2016/2017 to 4.4% in 2024/2025.7.86.810.2YY
CONTMatureMature v Young non-continuation gap98.510.1YY
CONTMatureClose the gap in continuation rates between young and mature students (by 1pp each year) by 2024/25.536.1YY
CONTMaturePercentage difference in non-continuation rates between mature and young students5.303.805.80YY
ATTAINDisabledPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between disabled students and other students2.601.720.9NN
ATTAINDisabledDisabled students attainment gap v non-disabled31.51.2NN
ATTAINDisabledTo significantly reduce the difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between disabled students and students with no known disability4.420.30NN
ATTAINDisabledPercentage point difference in good degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between disabled and not known to be disabled students.65-2.2NN
ATTAINDisabledTo remove the absolute gap in degree outcomes for students with a disability (OfS KPM5).4.02.0-0.60NN
ATTAINDisabledPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between disabled and non-disabled students3.902.003.60YN
ATTAINDisabledPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between students with registered mental health disabilities and non-disabled students5.803.004.7YN
ATTAINDisabledPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between disabled students and non-disabled students 4.22.33.6YN
ATTAINEthnicityBlack students attainment gap v White (relates to KPM4)2015.511.2NN
ATTAINEthnicityBy 2025, reduce the attainment gap between Asian and white students8.45.24.80NN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between black and white students (5 year rolling average).128.64.60NN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and asian students.191714.4NN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students.14.0011.009.90NN
ATTAINEthnicityTo close the gap between Black and White student continuation rates (reducing the gap by 4 percentage points, from 8% to 4%, by 2024/2025).85.65.5NN
ATTAINEthnicityTo close the gap between BME and White student attainment (reducing the gap by 3 percentage points from 11% to 8% by 2024/25).1713.111.6NN
ATTAINEthnicityClose the unexplained gap between proportion of BAME and white full-time, first degree students attaining a 2:1 or above from 12.7% in 2017/2018 to 5.5% in 2024/2025.12.710.310.8YN
ATTAINEthnicitySignificantly increase the percentage of our intake from Black students2.303.802.90YN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students15.709.81511.6YN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and Asian students12.58.37511.4YN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between black and white students.201519.00YN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and BME students.5.202.004.60YN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students.13.8612.9YN
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between BAME and White students.7.004.007.50YY
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students4.503.0031.00YY
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and BAME students9.506.0011.60YY
ATTAINEthnicityBy 2025, reduce the attainment gap between black and white students8.75.910.70YY
ATTAINEthnicityTo significantly reduce the difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students11.61020.00YY
ATTAINEthnicityTo significantly reduce the difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and Asian students10.61014.50YY
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage point difference in good degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students.181422.1YY
ATTAINEthnicityPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between white and black students.171522.9YY
ATTAINEthnicityHalve the gap in attainment that are visible between black and white students (OfS KPM4).10.07.015.80YY
ATTAINEthnicityTo close the gap between Black and White student attainment (by raising the attainment of Black students) reducing the gap by 8.5 percentage points from 17% to 8.5% by 2024/25119.524YY
ATTAINLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Percentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between POLAR4 quintile 5 and quintile 1 students9.104.6458.7YN
ATTAINMATUREClose the unexplained gap between proportion of mature and young full-time, first degree students attaining a 2:1 or above from 12.1% in 2017/2018 to 6.8% in 2024/2025.12.18.812.6YY
ATTAINSocio-economicPercentage difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between students from most and least deprived areas (based on IMD)10.206.0012.30YY
ATTAINSocio-economicTo significantly reduce the difference in degree attainment (1st and 2:1) between the most and least advantaged as measured by IMD.10.48.815.60YY
ATTAINSocio-economicReduce the gaps in attainment that are visible between IMD Q1 and Q5 (OfS KPM3).10.07.013.70YY
ACCESSDisabledBy 2025, increase the proportion of students with a declared disability enrolling from the baseline of 9% to 13%91115.70NN
ACCESSEthnicitySignificantly increase the percentage of our intake from Asian students6.908.509.70NN
ACCESSEthnicityPercentage of BAME entrants10.1012.5012.70NN
ACCESSEthnicityIncrease percentage proportion of students identifying as black entering to at least match or exceed sector average (11%).9.510.511.7NN
ACCESSEthnicityTo increase the proportion of Black, young, full-time undergraduate entrants by 1.2 percentage points, from 2.4% to 3.6% by 2024/25.2.42.82.1YY
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students7.4:16:14.5NN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Reduce the ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students 3.9:13.4:13.4:1NN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)By 2025, reduce the gap in access between those from the highest and lowest POLAR4 quintiles enrolling from the baseline of 49% to 41%494541.00NN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Ratio of students from POLAR Q1 compared to POLAR Q5.01:1401:118.5NN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Close the gap in access between Q1 and Q5 students from a ratio of 5.5 in 2017/2018 to 3.5 by 2024/2025.5.53.644.2YN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Reduce ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students12:18:18.5YN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)To reduce the gap in participation and ratio in entry rates for POLAR 4 Quintile 5: Quintile 1 studentsRatio Q5:Q1 of 5.2:1500 students from POLAR 4 Q14.5 or 500YN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)LPN determined by POLAR 4 data. Looking specifically at increasing the intake for LPN Quintile 1 students, and thereby reduce the ratio of Q5 to Q1. (Target articulated as both a percentage and number).8.0%, 39110%, 4908.6, 400YN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students.7.4:15.5:16.9YN
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students. All undergraduates.6.2:15.1:16.3YY
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students.4.2:13.5:14.3YY
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)Ratio in entry rates for POLAR4 quintile 5: quintile 1 students. Reduce gap to 3.0 to 1.0 by 2024-25 (OfS KPM2).5:2 to 145.2YY
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)To increase the proportion of young, full-time undergraduate entrants from POLAR4 Q1 by 2.5 percentage points, from 7.8% to 10.3%, by 2024/25.7.88.910.3YY
ACCESSLow Participation Neighbourhood (LPN)To increase the proportion of young, full-time undergraduate entrants from POLAR4 Q2 by 2.5 percentage points, from 12.4% to 14.9%, by 2024/25.12.413.915.4YY
ACCESSMaturePercentage of mature entrants5.807.203.70YY
ACCESSMaturePercentage of mature students as part of the overall cohort.9.211.06.70YY
ACCESSMultipleIncrease the proportion of BME students from Q1 and Q2 backgrounds5.287.6NY
ACCESSSocio-economicEliminate the IMD Q5:Q1 access gap by 2024/25.52-4.5NN
ACCESSSocio-economicBy 2025, reduce the gap in access between those from the highest and lowest IMD quintiles from the baseline of 16.4% to 10.4%16.413.57.00NN
ACCESSSocio-economicPercentage point difference in access rates between IMD quintile 1 and 2 and quintile 3, 4 and 5 students.51.843.853.4YY

Milestones and baselines

If we start with access, of the 25 targets that can be analysed, 14 behind milestone – and 10 show a worse performance than the baseline.

On continuation, 11 of the 17 are behind milestone, and 9 are behind the baseline. And on attainment, 25 of the 38 are behind milestone, and 14 behind baseline.

Notwithstanding that some of the other targets might have been smashed, and that in all cases the performance may well have improved since then, that looks like pretty poor performance to me.

It’s the sort of thing that we might have expected to result in fines, or at least specific conditions of registration being imposed.

But as far as we know, nothing beyond enhanced monitoring has been applied – and even then, we don’t know who has been under enhanced monitoring.

And the results are a problem. When OfS launched this batch of plans, it noted that young people from the most advantaged areas of England were over six times as likely to attend one of the most selective universities – including Oxford, Cambridge and other members of the Russell Group – as those from the most disadvantaged areas, and that that gap had hardly changed despite a significant expansion in the number of university places available.

At the rates of progress forecast under those plans, the ratio was supposed to be less than 4:1 by 2025. It was still at 5.44 in the Russell Group in 2022/23.

It was supposed to mean around 6,500 extra students from the most disadvantaged areas attending those universities each year from 2024-25 onwards. The Russell Group isn’t the whole of “high tariff” – but it had only increased its total of POLAR1 students by 1350 by 2022/23.

OfS also said that nationally, the gap between the proportion of white and black students who are awarded a 1st or 2:1 degree would drop from 22 to 11.2 percentage points by this year. As we’ve noted before on the site, the apparent narrowing during Covid was more of a statistical trick than anything else. It was up at 22.4 in 2022/23.

And the gap in dropout rates between students from the most and least represented groups was supposed to fall from 4.6 to 2.9 percentage points – it was up at 5.3pp in 2022/23.

The aggregation of ambition into press-releasable targets appears to have suffered from a similar fate to the equivalent exercise over financial sustainability.

What a wonderful thing

Of course, much has happened since January 2020. To the extent to which there were challenges over the student life cycle, they were likely exacerbated by the pandemic and a subsequent cost of living crisis.

But when you’re approving four year plans, changes in the external risk environment ought to mean that it revises what it now calls an Equality of Opportunity Risk Register to reflect that – and either allows providers to revise targets down, or requires more action/investment to meet the targets agreed.

Neither of those things seem to have happened.

It’s also the case that OfS has radically changed how it regulates in this area. Back then, the director for fair access and participation was Chris Millward. It’s now John Blake. And the guidance, nature of the plans expected and monitoring regimes have all been revamped.

But when we’re dealing with long-term plans, a changing of the guard does run the risk that the expectations and targets agreed under any old regime get sidelined and forgotten about – letting poor performers off the hook.

It certainly feels like that’s the case. And while John Blake is widely respected, it’s hard to believe that he’ll still be the director for fair access and participation by the end of the latest round of plans – 2029.

Hindsight is a wonderful thing, of course, but notwithstanding the external environment changes, few anticipated that any of the gaps, percentages or ratios would worsen for any of the targets set back in 2019.

That matters because of that OfS aggregation issue. It’s not just that some providers can drag down the performance of the sector as a whole. It’s that no provider was set the target of not getting any worse on the myriad of measures that it didn’t pick for its plan.

For all we know, while a certain number of providers might have set and agreed a target, say, on POLAR1 access or IMD attainment, performance could have worsened in all of those that didn’t – and that poses a major problem for the regulator and the design of the thing.

It remains the case that we’re lacking clarity on the way in which the explosion of franchised, urban area business provision has impacted the stats of both the providers that have lit that blue touch paper, and the sector’s scores overall. For me, improvements in access via that method look like cheating – and declines in continuation, completion or progression ought to mean serious questions over funding policy within the Department for Education.

We don’t really know – but need to know – the impact of other providers’ behaviour on an individual provider’s external environment. If, for example, high tariff universities scoop up more disadvantaged students (without necessarily actually narrowing the gap), that could end up widening the gap elsewhere too. There’s only so many moles to whack when you’re looking at access.

We still can’t see A&P performance by subject area – which has always been an issue when we think about access to the professions, but is an even bigger issue now that whole subject areas are being culled in the face of financial problems.

And the size and shape question lingers too. UCAS figures at the close of clearing suggested that high tariff providers were set to balance the books by expanding in ways they claimed were impossible when the “mutant algorithm” hit in 2020.

Much of continuation, completion and progression appears to be about the overall mix of students at a provider – something that’s made much more challenging in medium and lower tariff providers if high-tariff ones lower theirs.

In the forthcoming skills white paper, we should expect exhortations from ministers that the sector improves its performance on access and participation. It will have choices on provider type, subject area, the types of disadvantage to focus on, and the mix of measures between things inside its control in the external environment, and things within providers’ control (or at least influence) that OfS should expect.

Whatever it chooses, on the evidence available, it will have real problems judging either its own performance, its regulator’s, groups of providers or even individuals’. If you think the sector still has some distance to go on fairness, that just won’t do.

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