Twenty-four universities will see their entire teaching grants cut under the Browne review’s plans to focus Government spending on science, engineering, technology and maths undergraduates. Figures released by the Labour party from the House of Commons library confirm the likely impact of the Government’s reforms on England’s 128 Higher Education institutions.
As revealed on Left Foot Forward last week, David Willetts is intent on implementing the Browne review recommendation to scrap state funding of arts, humanities, and the social sciences degrees. A survey of Vice-Chancellors last week, revealed that many were “looking at losing between 75 and 95 per cent of teaching funds.” The House of Commons library figures show that 73 universities will see their teaching budgets cut by more than 75%.
Channel 4’s Fact Check has examined how the teaching cut will mean that most universities will have to charge fees of £7,000 or more. They conclude that:
“There seems to be little doubt that the changes to higher education funding announced today represent a significant shift from government funding to student funding for their education.”
The 24 Universities who may see their teaching grants scrapped entirely are:
– London School of Economics and Political Science
– The School of Oriental and African Studies
– Guildhall School of Music & Drama
– Bishop Grosseteste College
– Central School of Speech and Drama
– York St John University College
– College of St Mark and St John
– University College Falmouth
– The University of Winchester
– Newman College of Higher Education
– Rose Bruford College
– Royal Academy of Music
– Royal College of Music
– Royal Northern College of Music
– Trinity and All Saints College
– Trinity Laban
– The University of Chichester
– Goldsmiths College
– Institute of Education,
– Norwich School of Art and Design
– Conservatoire for Dance and Drama
– Birmingham College of Food, Tourism and Creative Studies
– Courtauld Institute of Art
– Heythrop College
– Leeds College of Music
The Business Department’s spending review settlement outlined that:
“the overall resource budget for Higher Education, excluding research funding, will reduce from £7.1 billion to £4.2 billion, a 40%, or £2.9 billion, reduction by 2014-15. The Department will continue to fund teaching for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (S.T.E.M) subjects.”
But the £7.1 billion figure includes maintenance costs which are being extended by £400m. Scrapping all funding for “subject bands C and D” would, according to the House of Commons library, mean a £3.0 billion cut from the total £4.6 billion teaching grant – a cut of 67%.
UPDATE 17.30:
I wonder if the Lib Dem MPs who were reliant on student votes realise what this will mean in their patch. These reforms would mean an 85% teaching budget cut for Sheffield Hallam in Nick Clegg’s constituency, Manchester Metropolitan students living in Manchester Withington are looking at a 69% cut, University of the West England in Bristol West will face 80% cuts, and Leeds Metropolitan will face 88% cuts.
84 Responses to “LSE, SOAS and Guildhall among Unis to see teaching grants abolished”
Clegg under fire over fees as violence mars student protest | Left Foot Forward
[…] week, Left Foot Forward reported on the likely abolition of teaching grants to 24 UK universities, including the LSE and SOAS, following universities […]
Patrick Ainley
The Coalition has made matters worse by raising Browne’s suggested ‘soft cap’ on fees from £6,000 to a ‘hard cap’ of £9,000 per annum combined with cutting arts and humanities funding. If this happens it will end higher education as it has developed since the war, along with the whole effort to reform society through education.
Arts and humanities will be left to overseas students and others who are seriously rich at elite and surviving campus universities. For the rest, vocational courses contracted out to the private sector leave only Science, Technology, Engineering and Medicine as the remaining universities and colleges collapse and merge into local e-learning hubs proffering part-time and distance provision.
The FE colleges are forgotten again but will be swallowed up by this vocational HE become FE. The only role remaining for them is to deliver the Apprenticeships Without Jobs that will replay 1970s and ’80s YOP and YTS. FE still has the majority of NUS’s membership and with UCU and NUT, student and teacher unions are well aware that this is an attack upon an entire so-called ‘Lost Generation’.
In fact, the strongest argument against raising fees is what else are school and college leavers supposed to do?
Patrick Ainley
co-author ‘Lost Generation? New strategies for youth and education’, London: Continuum 2010 http://www.continuumbooks.com/books/detail.aspx?BookId=157236&SearchType=Basic
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‘Excrementum semper concitandum’
In defence of the liberal arts - why the government must think again | Left Foot Forward
[…] These reforms are not just a hike in the cost of university, they are an unprecedented attack on the liberal arts in higher education. Some of this country’s greatest institutions, from the London School of Economics to SOAS, will effectively be privatised. […]
Thomas McCarthy-Ward
Ooh, Imperial's teaching grant from the govt is to be cut by only 6%. Average cut is 70%. Yay us! (source: http://j.mp/aBiwRU )