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London and UK trends in higher education LSE Seminar 18 February 2013
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Presentation overview UK higher education Current trends – participation rates, student demographics UK’s global position London as a higher education hub Particular focus on international students and competition - why so important?
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NATIONAL OVERVIEW
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UK HEIs
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Student numbers Course levelNumber of students enrolled 2011/12 Undergraduate1,928,140 Postgraduate568,505 TOTAL2,496,645
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Students by domicile Domicile2010/112011/12% change UK2,073,0702,061,410-0.6% Other EU130,120132,5501.9% Non-EU298,110302,6801.5% TOTAL2,501,2952,496,645-0.2%
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Participation rates
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UK’s global standing (OECD)
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Non-EU students – course type
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International students
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LONDON
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London as an education hub Educate 426,000 students from the UK and overseas 30,000 undergraduate and postgraduate courses on offer 101,000 academic and non-academic staff
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Economic impact London HEIs generate £12 billion each year £4.85 billion in direct economic impact £6.7 billion in secondary, or indirect, activities £820 million from international students in London Source: Making an economic impact: Higher education and the English regions. Research Report, Universities UK. June 2010.
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Skills Jobs Training of high skilled staff – five medical schools in London plus dentists and allied health workers Start-ups Provision of CPD
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Partnerships Over 3 million people attend events organised by London HEIs each year School based outreach activities Widening participation Business and community partnerships Teaching training Volunteering & fundraising (RAG week)
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Innovation £300 million Research Council grants £470 million of research funding from HEFCE Inward investment from research funding
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Culture 20 HEIs providing arts and humanities teaching and research Community and cultural activities 250 spin-offs with a revenue of £8 million Contributing the equivalent of £2 million in staff time for free performances (2007/8 figure)
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Showcasing the UK London Olympics & Paralympics Accommodation for games’ officials Hosting national teams e.g. Team USA trained at University of East London Games’ makers
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Workforce impact
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Highly skilled migration
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LONDON AS AN INTERNATIONAL HUB
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International student enrolments by region/ home nation
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International student enrolments by region/ home nation 2011/12
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Regional/ home nation split between UK, EU and non-EU students 2011/12
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London’s global standing 2 nd in QS Best Student Cities 2012 Scored highly on student mix, rankings, employer activity Paris top, Boston 3 rd Two Australian cities in the top 10 (Sydney & Melbourne)
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Why so popular? 43 HEFCE funded bodies Students from 200 countries 21% of Londoners are not UK nationals Over 300 languages spoken
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But competition looms.... At a national level At a city level
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National strategies Australia, Canada, USA, New Zealand, Germany and France Increasing number of courses taught in English in Europe
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Some negative signs.....
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Agent barometer Source: 2012 Agent Barometer, i-Graduate
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International city welcome: Brisbane www.studybrisbane.com.au
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Melbourne/ Perth
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Wellington – New York – Osaka – Auckland
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To conclude.... Higher education is an integral part of London It contributes a huge amount to London’s prosperity, innovation, economy, culture London is one of the most attractive destinations for international students But it faces increasing competition....!
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