Analysis shows plans for higher GCSE threshold could disqualify 48% of disadvantaged students and hit north harder than south

Nearly half of all disadvantaged pupils in England could be prevented from going to university under government plans for a minimum GCSE entry level for higher education, university leaders are warning.

Vice-chancellors believe that the government is poised to introduce a new entry threshold for a place on university courses as a means of reining in its rising student loan debt, with outstanding loans reaching £140bn last year. They are expecting the government to announce that students will not be eligible for a student loan unless they have at least a level 4 (the equivalent of an old grade C) in maths and English at GCSE.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

I have an irrational and extreme fear of my grandson dying | Ask Philippa

Your own mortality might be the underlying fear – but your love…

Peers set to slow down attempts to scrap thousands of EU laws

Plans by the government to review up to 4,000 pieces of EU…