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One in four BAME people in Britain want ‘name-blind’ university applications
More than a quarter of Bame Britons believe removing names from university applications would widen access, compared to less than a sixth of white Britons, research reveals.The majority of people in ethnic minorities (64 per cent) say more effort needs to be made to increase university applications from minority groups, according to data shared with The Independent.Sector leaders are now calling for “name-blind” university applications to be looked at again in a bid to address concerns around unconscious bias. The findings come as universities such as Oxford and Cambridge have come under fire for a lack of diversity. The vice-chancellor of Oxford admitted that the institution’s intake still “reflects the deep inequalities” in society this week as figures revealed that less than a third of Oxford colleges admitted three or fewer black applicants in the past three years.The survey by Opinium, of more than 2,000 people weighted to be nationally representative, reveals that people from ethnic minority groups are more likely to identify a clear link between a good education and success – and yet only half of ethnic minorities feel that higher education is easily accessible to them.The data comes after ministers and the Office for Students regulator (OfS) have repeatedly called on elite UK universities to admit more students from ethnic minorities.Labour MP David Lammy, who last year criticised Oxford’s “glacial progress” in boosting diversity as he claimed the university was a “bastion” of white, middle-class privilege, said: “The feeling that the Bame community have of being underrepresented at our universities is not just mere perception.”Dr Zubaida Haque, deputy director of the Runnymede Trust, a race equality think tank, said it was not surprising people belonging to ethnic minorities felt name-blind university applications might improve their prospects.Recent research carried out by academics based at Oxford University found that British citizens from ethnic minority backgrounds have to send, on average, 60 per cent more job applications to get a positive response from employers compared to their white counterparts.Ms Haque said: “Name-blind CVs will certainly help to minimise overt discrimination by HR and admissions officers.“But the problem is, it doesn’t address racial biases – it merely removes the opportunity at recruitment stage and it doesn’t prevent discrimination happening at a later stage.”Ucas released a report on “name-blind” applications in 2017, after a pilot study at six universities, but it found no conclusive evidence that masking applicants’ names led to significantly different outcomes.However, in light of the Opinium survey findings, the OfS has said it would be open to further research into name-blind university applications to see if there are ways that the approach could work.Paul Cottrell, acting general secretary of the University and College Union, said the union would also welcome any reforms to allow students to apply to university without having to give their name. He said: “This should remove any unconscious bias and help level the playing field for university applicants.”Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, added that it could be worth exploring name-blind applications again to counter “unconscious bias” and make the system fairer. The calls come after The Independent revealed last year that black students seeking a place at university are 21 times more likely to have their applications investigated for suspected false or missing information than their white counterparts, which prompted accusations of “institutional racism”.Samuel Babarinde, one prospective black student who had his university application flagged by Ucas, decided to pull out of the application process after he found Ucas’s investigation to be “intimidating”.But a number of organisations, which are aiming to increase applications from black students to the UK’s most selective universities, say that name-blind applications are not the only answer. Naomi Kellman, founder of Target Oxbridge, said more outreach to pupils earlier on in secondary school, as well as access to role models, would help to widen access. “There is no single solution to this challenge so we must be doing multiple things,” she said. Mary Bonsu, a black first-year law student at Oxford University, added that removing names from applications could help address bias but she added that it would only be a “temporary fix”. It would not be as effective at universities that interview before offering a place, she added. Instead, universities should reach out to students earlier on to encourage them to apply, the 19-year-old said.The former state school student, whose father works in a shop and whose mother is a cleaner, told The Independent: “No one in my family had ever finished sixth form. Let alone go to university. “I thought Oxford was just a publishing thing, I didn’t know it was a university until the end of Year 11.” On the survey findings, Sarah Stevens, director of policy at the Russell Group, which represents the most selective universities, acknowledged that “more needs to be done” to boost diversity on campus. “Through sustained outreach and mentoring, summer schools and other initiatives, [members] support pupils who want to study at a selective university, helping them to achieve their goal,” she added.Helen Thorne, external relations director for Ucas, said: “Universities and colleges are committed to ensuring that admissions processes are fair and transparent for all students, and employ a range of robust strategies and policies to achieve this. “Minimising the risks of unconscious bias is an important part of this, and it’s encouraging that over 110 universities have used training and good practice resources in the last year.”A spokesperson for Universities UK said: “Universities are working hard to achieve greater equality of opportunity, including in England through targeted investment and interventions set out in their access and participation plans.”
Students from disadvantaged backgrounds that fail to meet the A-level grades required for entry to the University of Oxford will be offered a free year of study under new measures to widen access.
The institution is launching programmes to help disadvantaged students who are offered a place at Oxford but struggle to meet entry requirements, or need help with the transition.
One in four undergraduates at Oxford will be from the UK's most underrepresented backgrounds by 2023, the university has claimed. Currently only 15 per cent are from this group.
The announcement comes after both Oxford and Cambridge came under increased pressure over a lack of diversity after some of their colleges admitted failed to admit a single black student.
Around 50 bright students who have experienced severe disadvantage or educational disruption, and are not in a position to make a “competitive application”, will be offered a foundation year.
Students eligible for the programme, who will be able to get a place with lower A-level grades than other applicants, may include refugees and children in care or with care responsibilities themselves.
The participants will all be based at Oxford colleges and provided they successfully complete the programme, will move on to the undergraduate degree for which they were admitted.
Another programme, aimed at students from poorer backgrounds who do have the required grades, will help up to 200 students get additional support to transition successfully from school.
The free scheme will comprise of structured study at home, plus two weeks of residential study at Oxford, just before the start of the undergraduate term.
When fully up and running, the programmes aim to help up to 250 state school students a year, representing 10 per cent of Oxford’s UK undergraduate intake.
Professor Louise Richardson, vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford, described the movement as a “sea change” in the admissions for the world-renowned university.
She said colleagues “have united behind a commitment to accelerate the pace at which we are diversifying our student body and ensuring that every academically exceptional student in the country knows that they have a fair chance of a place at Oxford."
Sir Peter Lampl, founder and chairman of social mobility charity Sutton Trust, said: “It’s great to see Oxford looking to new solutions to tackle the problem of how to support students from under-represented backgrounds. The scale of these programmes is really impressive.”
On the foundation year, Sir Peter said: “Many poorer students just narrowly miss out on places because they haven’t quite got the grades required. This will give a wider pool of students access to one of the world’s great universities.”
Last year, the University of Cambridge revealed similar plans to widen access when it announced it would give dozens of disadvantaged students that fail to meet the grades a free foundation year.
The vice chancellor said at the time, however, that he could not guarantee that all of the students on the foundation programme would be admitted to Cambridge for an undergraduate degree.
Angela Rayner, Labour’s shadow education secretary, said: “All our top universities should take urgent action to improve access to students from disadvantaged and underrepresented backgrounds, and this is an important step in the right direction. For too long our top universities have been a closed club, with access dominated by a wealthy and privileged elite.
“Universities have not taken the necessary steps required to improve access and the government has taken no meaningful action to hold them to account for a shocking lack of progress.”