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Student scholarship fund to be cut by £100m | |
(35 minutes later) | |
A student scholarship programme in England created in response to fears about the impact of higher tuition fees is to have its budget heavily cut. | A student scholarship programme in England created in response to fears about the impact of higher tuition fees is to have its budget heavily cut. |
The government's Spending Review includes plans to cut the National Scholarship Programme from £150m to £50m in 2015-16. | |
The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills says that the scholarship scheme is not being scrapped. | The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills says that the scholarship scheme is not being scrapped. |
But funding will be for postgraduate rather than undergraduate students. | But funding will be for postgraduate rather than undergraduate students. |
The National Union of Students said the decision "effectively cancelled the National Scholarship Programme", which it said would have provided "small bursaries for the poorest undergraduates in higher education". | The National Union of Students said the decision "effectively cancelled the National Scholarship Programme", which it said would have provided "small bursaries for the poorest undergraduates in higher education". |
A Department for Business statement says it will "refocus" the scholarship programme to "support postgraduate students from disadvantaged backgrounds". | |
Fee protests | Fee protests |
This will now be a £50m fund, administered by the Higher Education Funding Council for England. | |
In the previous year, 2014-15, funding for the scholarships had been set at £150m. | In the previous year, 2014-15, funding for the scholarships had been set at £150m. |
The National Scholarship Programme had been announced by Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg in February 2011. | The National Scholarship Programme had been announced by Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg in February 2011. |
The raising of tuition fees to up to £9,000 had prompted student protests and warnings that poorer students would be excluded from university. | The raising of tuition fees to up to £9,000 had prompted student protests and warnings that poorer students would be excluded from university. |
The scholarship scheme had been launched as a response to such fears, with promises that 50,000 students from poorer backgrounds would receive funding. | |
The scholarship programme offered fee waivers and cash bursaries of up to £1,000 per year. | The scholarship programme offered fee waivers and cash bursaries of up to £1,000 per year. |
This month Business Secretary Vince Cable commended the achievements of the programme in its first year of funding students. | |
Growing concerns | |
The department says that higher fees have not deterred poorer students, as applications by them have continued to increase. | |
The switch to support to postgraduate funding reflects growing concerns about students not continuing beyond graduate level. | The switch to support to postgraduate funding reflects growing concerns about students not continuing beyond graduate level. |
The 1994 Group of research universities welcomed the shift to postgraduate students saying university leaders had warned of a "looming crisis in postgraduate education". | |
The UCU lecturers' union said the scholarship programme had been "widely regarded as a sweetener to get Liberal Democrat MPs to back higher tuition fees". | |
"Put simply, today is another dark day for students under the coalition government," said the union's president, Simon Renton. | |
A department spokeswoman said: "Our reforms mean responsibility to widen access to higher education for undergraduates has shifted from government to universities, which are now well funded to do this. | |
"Universities are increasing their investment in widening access by £100m over the next four years, to reach £670m in 2016-17. | "Universities are increasing their investment in widening access by £100m over the next four years, to reach £670m in 2016-17. |
"This means the government is able to refocus the National Scholarship Programme on supporting people from less advantaged backgrounds to access postgraduate study, which is where it is most needed." | "This means the government is able to refocus the National Scholarship Programme on supporting people from less advantaged backgrounds to access postgraduate study, which is where it is most needed." |
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