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  • Strategic Governance: The Infrastructure for University Growth

    Strategic Governance: The Infrastructure for University Growth

    Growth Is a Governance Challenge

    Picture this: Your university launches an ambitious growth strategy that includes new programs, bold enrollment targets, and a brand refresh for online programs. The marketing team hits its lead goals. Admissions teams work overtime to reach new yield levels. But then … faculty scramble to staff courses, advising and registration queues explode, and new student satisfaction sours. The strategy was sound. The execution was great — until it wasn’t. 

    What failed? Was it communication, culture, or resourcing? No, it was the absence of strategic governance.

    In a prior article, I argue that presidents and provosts must establish formal cross-functional structures with real authority to align leaders around a unified enrollment vision, coordinate strategies, and embed shared accountability metrics across the student life cycle. 

    This article goes deeper. Here, we make the case that strategic growth at the institutional level is fundamentally a governance challenge. Without intentional governance infrastructure and practice, ambitious growth strategies may fail to reach their full potential. In this article, we outline:

    • Why strategic governance matters
    • How universities can design governance infrastructure to enable sustainable growth and cultivate a governance culture that supports execution
    • Common governance pitfalls to avoid

    Why Strategic Governance Matters

    Decentralized universities can enable pockets of innovation and growth for a time. But today’s crowded and complex market demands an institutional strategy and approach. Enrollment growth, modality expansion, student success initiatives, and new credential portfolios all require coordinated decisions across multiple academic and administrative units with different incentives, budgets, and governance traditions.

    Strategic governance provides the connective tissue that turns institutional ambition into coordinated action. 

    Strategic governance addresses these challenges by creating decision rights, accountability structures, and coordination mechanisms that align academic and administrative units around institutional growth priorities.

    Defining Strategic Governance in Higher Education

    Strategic governance isn’t simply about creating more committees. It’s a system of structures, processes, roles, and norms that enable the institution to make coordinated, timely, and data-informed decisions in service of strategic goals.

    In the context of institutional growth, strategic governance answers three questions:

    • Who decides? — Decision rights and authority
    • How do they decide? — Processes, data, and cadence
    • How are decisions evaluated and execution tracked? — Accountability, incentives, and performance management

    Effective strategic governance balances autonomy with coordination, enabling institution-wide alignment on growth priorities.

    Designing Strategic Governance Infrastructure

    Developing governance infrastructure requires intentional design. But infrastructure alone is insufficient. Strategic governance succeeds when design meets shared accountability and collaborative decision-making. Below are key components universities should consider to capture both a successful infrastructure and a culture of effective governance.

    1. Executive-Level Growth Governance Bodies

    Universities should establish a cabinet-level body responsible for growth strategy. This cabinet is chaired by the provost or president and includes academic deans, enrollment leadership, and leaders from central services and planning, student affairs, and technology. 

    Executive leaders should incorporate enrollment growth and student success metrics into leadership evaluations for deans and vice presidents. Shared metrics reinforce that growth is the responsibility of the institution, not a mandate from the central office.

    Key responsibilities include:

    • Setting context-informed enrollment and program growth targets by academic unit
    • Approving portfolio strategy (programs, credentials, modalities) to ensure support and avoid duplication
    • Aligning resource planning (instructional delivery hiring, course scheduling, incremental infrastructure growth)
    • Monitoring performance and intervening as needed

    This body must have clear authority to allocate resources, set priorities, and escalate decisions to the president or board when necessary.

    Academic leaders often lack training in enterprise governance. Professional development, as needed, should cover:

    • Understanding data-driven decision-making
    • Using the RACI (responsible, accountable, consulted, informed) matrix and decision rights
    • Developing financial modeling and margin analysis skills
    • Developing change management and stakeholder alignment skills

    2. Integrated Enrollment and Student Success Council

    The integrated council should sit just below the executive cabinet and bring together admissions, marketing, financial aid, registration, advising, career services, and academic scheduling teams. Appointing cross-functional roles such as vice provost for enrollment strategy or chief student success officer signals institutional commitment to integration. These leaders should have dotted-line authority across academic and administrative units.

    The council ensures:

    • Funnel metrics remain apples-to-apples and continuously improve
    • Course and advising capacity align with enrollment plans
    • Student success interventions are coordinated across academic and student support units

    3. Program Portfolio Governance

    Growth often comes through new programs, stackable credentials, and alternative modalities. Universities need a framework that evaluates proposals based on:

    • Market demand and competitive positioning
    • Financial viability and margin contribution
    • Academic capacity and faculty workload
    • Strategic alignment with institutional mission

    This framework should also include postlaunch performance reviews to prevent portfolio sprawl and underperforming programs. Budget models can reward units that contribute to institutional growth (e.g., revenue sharing for online programs, investment funds for cross-school initiatives). Incentives should discourage siloed behavior that undermines growth.

    4. Data and Analytics Infrastructure

    Governance without data is performative. Institutions must invest in analytics platforms that integrate data from customer relationship management (CRM) systems, student information systems (SISs), learning management systems (LMSs), and finance and human resources (HR) records into executive dashboards or reports.

    Effective governance dashboards:

    • Track demand, conversion, yield, retention, and completion
    • Forecast capacity constraints (faculty, sections, advising)
    • Highlight variance from targets, with clear escalation triggers

    Data literacy training for academic and administrative leaders is essential to ensure that dashboards drive decision-making, not just reporting.

    5. Decision Cadence and Escalation Pathways

    Strategic governance requires regular review. Institutions should define which items require monthly, term-level, or annual review. Escalation pathways should specify when issues move from operational councils to executive governance bodies and ultimately to the president or board.

    Regular governance updates to faculty senates, staff councils, and boards build trust and transparency and reduce perceptions of administrative overreach.

    Common Governance Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

    Even well-designed governance structures can fail if common implementation traps aren’t addressed. Executive leaders can underestimate how organizational dynamics, incentives, and authority structures can undermine strategic governance effectiveness. Below are some pitfalls for institutions to anticipate and avoid.

    Pitfall 1: The Appearance of Governance Without Authority

    Creating committees without decision rights leads to frustration and inaction. Charters should explicitly define authority, scope, and escalation mechanisms.

    Pitfall 2: Coordination Scope Creep That Undermines Academic Autonomy

    Strategic governance should coordinate, but not dictate, pedagogy and activities that impact instructional capacity. Academic units must retain ownership of curriculum, research agendas, and faculty governance.

    Pitfall 3: Data Without Action

    Dashboards that don’t trigger decisions or resource shifts become noise in the system. Governance bodies must commit to acting on data, even when decisions are politically challenging.

    Pitfall 4: Misaligned Budget Models

    If academic units bear the instructional costs of growth without sharing in the revenue upside, resistance is to be expected. Budget models must align financial incentives with institutional goals.

    Pitfall 5: Change Fatigue and Cultural Resistance

    Governance redesign can overwhelm institutions. Leaders should sequence changes, pilot governance structures, and celebrate early wins to build momentum.

    The President and Provost as Chief Governance Architects

    Higher education leaders increasingly recognize that enrollment growth and student success are institutional imperatives that cut across academic units, student services, finance, technology, and governance.

    Strategic governance isn’t bureaucratic overhead. It’s the operating system for institutional growth. By intentionally designing governance structures, cultivating a collaborative culture, and avoiding common pitfalls, higher education leaders can transform growth from episodic campaigns into sustainable institutional capability.

    Ultimately, strategic governance is a leadership responsibility. Presidents and provosts must act as chief governance architects, designing structures that enable coordinated execution while preserving institutional values. This requires political capital, clarity of vision, and sustained attention. The alternatives are fragmented growth, reactive operations, and eroding student experience, which proves far more costly over time.

    Build the Governance Infrastructure That Turns Growth Strategy Into Results

    Strategic growth works best when teams are aligned, decisions are clear, and everyone is moving toward the same goal. Archer Education helps institutions build the governance structures that make that alignment possible — without adding unnecessary complexity.

    As a trusted growth enablement partner, we work alongside leaders to connect strategy, enrollment, and student experience in practical, sustainable ways. If you’re ready to turn growth plans into coordinated action, let’s talk about what’s possible together.

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  • Wales needs a plan. Don’t we all

    Wales needs a plan. Don’t we all

    In early 2025, Vikki Howells – then freshly installed as Wales’ Minister for Further and Higher Education – asked Medr for an overview of the demand, provision, and distribution of subject areas across higher education in Wales.

    As per the Tertiary Education and Research (Wales) Act, Medr has an explicit duty to map subject availability – the argument was that fragmented oversight had allowed gaps, duplication, and instability to develop across the post-compulsory sector.

    The mapping function was a precondition for coherent planning – without a system-level view, institutions would keep expanding or withdrawing provision in isolation, and learner choice would suffer.

    What she now has is 117 pages of charts, tables, annexes, and carefully hedged observations that add up to fairly forensic public examination of Welsh HE’s subject mix.

    Medr’s data tells a story about a system simultaneously too concentrated geographically, too thin in subject breadth, and – perhaps most provocatively – not primarily oriented around serving Welsh-domiciled students at all.

    The big numbers

    In 2023/24, there were 150,680 enrolments at Welsh higher education providers, distributed across nine universities, a handful of FE colleges, and a small number of alternative providers. Business and management dominates at 17 per cent, followed by subjects allied to medicine (12 per cent) and social sciences (10 per cent).

    Cardiff University is by far the largest provider at 33,020 enrolments; Aberystwyth, the smallest university, has 8,320. The FE colleges and alternative providers between them account for just 2,070.

    Overall enrolments grew 14 per cent over the past decade, which sounds healthy until you note that the UK figure was 25 per cent. Wales is growing more slowly than the system it sits within, and the gap is widening in several subject areas that matter.

    Arguably the most interesting finding isn’t about which subjects are growing or shrinking – it’s about who is studying them. For full-time undergraduate provision, only 39 per cent of enrolments at Welsh providers are Welsh-domiciled. Fifty-one per cent come from the rest of the UK – overwhelmingly England – and 10 per cent from overseas. For full-time postgraduate taught, the picture tilts further – 70 per cent overseas, 19 per cent Welsh, 12 per cent rest of UK.

    At subject level, the domicile data shows up something closer to an identity crisis. In economics, only 15 per cent of UCAS acceptances to Welsh providers are Welsh domiciles. In biosciences it’s 23 per cent, chemistry 24 per cent, geography 23 per cent, languages and area studies 23 per cent.

    For full-time undergraduate enrolments, subjects including languages, economics, geography, politics, physics and astronomy, and biosciences all draw over 70 per cent of their intake from the rest of the UK. These aren’t courses with a Welsh student body supplemented by cross-border recruitment – they’re courses where Welsh students are a small minority in institutions notionally part of the Welsh system.

    The question that raises is whether Welsh providers are functioning as a national system serving Wales or as overflow capacity for English demand. The supply and demand analysis offers a partial answer – for most subject groups, home-fee places at Welsh providers exceed Welsh-domiciled demand. But that surplus is being filled by English students.

    Meanwhile, in a handful of subjects, Welsh students who want to stay literally can’t.

    Pushed out

    Medr’s supply and demand comparison is blunt about where the structural shortfalls lie. Veterinary sciences is the most extreme case – 395 Welsh-domiciled students studying the subject across the UK, against just 10 home-fee places at Welsh providers. That’s 98 per cent excess demand, driven by the straightforward absence of a veterinary school in Wales during the period analysed.

    The creative and performing arts subjects tell a more politically uncomfortable story. Creative arts and design shows excess demand of 430 places (14 per cent), music 255 (24 per cent), and other performing arts 250 (28 per cent). These are subjects where Wales has historically had provision but has been withdrawing – full-time undergraduate degree enrolments in the area fell 32 per cent over the decade.

    The A-level pipeline is drying up too, with performing arts, art and design, and music completions all trending down. But demand from Welsh students still exceeds what Welsh providers offer, suggesting the problem is provision withdrawal rather than disappearing interest.

    Education and teaching shows excess demand of 265 places (13 per cent), which sits oddly alongside UCAS data showing applications and acceptances increasing sharply – the second-largest application increase of any subject group at Welsh providers, at 121 per cent between 2019 and 2024 entry, diverging from the UK picture where education applications fell. Demand exists that provision hasn’t kept pace with.

    Vanishing subjects

    Beyond the immediate capacity gaps, the trend data shows subjects in long-term decline – and declining faster in Wales than across the UK. Language and area studies has fallen 38 per cent over the decade (against 29 per cent UK-wide), concentrated in a single small provider – Aberystwyth, which accounts for 920 of 4,760 enrolments.

    The Common Aggregation Hierarchy (CAH) level 3 breakdown makes it sharper – Italian studies, Slavic studies, African and Middle Eastern studies all show zero enrolments. Modern languages submitted just 126 staff FTE to REF 2021 against 1,615 nationally. If Aberystwyth cuts languages, Wales effectively loses modern foreign language degrees.

    Physical sciences declined 38 per cent for full-time undergraduate degree enrolments. Mathematical sciences fell 19 per cent. Here the A-level pipeline data tells a genuinely puzzling story – completions in maths, physics, chemistry, and biology have been relatively stable or only modestly declining over the same period. The HE-level declines aren’t being driven by a disappearing school pipeline in the way that modern foreign languages or performing arts are.

    Medr itself speculates that those holding maths and science A-levels may be “more likely to enter higher education outside of Wales”, and lists cross-border flows as an area for future investigation. The implication is significant – Wales is producing the pipeline but losing the students, possibly because Welsh provision in these subjects isn’t perceived as competitive, possibly because there are better-ranked options across the border, possibly because there simply aren’t enough places at the right institutions.

    Design, and creative and performing arts declined 24 per cent overall. Here the pipeline story cuts differently – A-level completions in performing arts, art and design, and music have all fallen significantly, feeding a doom loop where fewer completions feed fewer enrolments, which makes provision harder to sustain, which reduces visibility and aspiration, which feeds fewer completions.

    Modern foreign languages show the same pattern – French A-level completions have collapsed, Welsh second language has fallen sharply, and these feed directly into the 38 per cent decline in language and area studies at HE level. These are pipeline problems that originate in school-level provision decisions and are partly consequences of curriculum and funding choices made well upstream of HE – but they compound the subject-level fragility that Medr documents.

    Too concentrated, too thin

    Cardiff holds 33 per cent of all enrolments despite having 13 per cent of the working-age population. Multiple subject groups have over 50 per cent of their enrolments in Cardiff alone – medicine and dentistry, pharmacology, chemistry, mathematical sciences, architecture, economics, politics, media, music, and other performing arts. If you live in North Wales, Mid Wales, or much of South West Wales and want to study any of those face-to-face, you’re looking at relocating.

    South East Wales excluding Cardiff is massively underprovided relative to population – 37 per cent of working-age residents, 18 per cent of enrolments. Mid Wales barely exists as an HE destination. North Wales has provision but a narrow subject range. Engineering is concentrated in South West Wales – essentially Swansea – and agriculture in Mid and North Wales (62 per cent).

    Provider concentration deepens the fragility – six of nine universities have business and management or subjects allied to medicine as their biggest subject, a sector converging on two areas because they recruit well from England and internationally. Aberystwyth’s biggest subject is language and area studies – the system’s most vulnerable group. Wrexham is nearly a third reliant on business and management alone.

    Physical sciences barely exists outside Cardiff and Swansea; mathematical sciences essentially rests on two research-intensive universities plus the Open University (OU). Within computing’s 9,715 enrolments, artificial intelligence accounts for just 265 – 2.9 per cent of UK AI enrolments – which, for a subject every government skills strategy identifies as critical, is a notable gap.

    One wrinkle – 11,525 enrolments (8 per cent) are located outside Wales entirely, including the University of Wales Trinity Saint David’s (UWTSD) London and Birmingham campuses and franchise provision in England. More than 10 per cent of enrolments in law, business, languages, philosophy, and media take place outside Wales. Part of the “Welsh provider offer” is geographically exported, thinning out what’s actually available within Welsh borders.

    And buried in tables 6 and 7 is a finding that sits uncomfortably alongside Cymraeg 2050. Between 2019/20 and 2023/24, enrolments studying 5+ credits through Welsh fell 9 per cent and 40+ credits fell 10 per cent. Computing Welsh-medium activity fell 83 per cent, business and management 70 per cent for 40+ credits, physical sciences 68 per cent – precisely the subjects associated with economic growth.

    Welsh-medium provision is concentrated almost entirely in full-time undergraduate study, with very little at postgraduate level. Even among fluent Welsh speakers, take-up is low – only 7 per cent of fluent Welsh-speaking computing students and 4 per cent of engineering students study any credits through Welsh. The system is moving in the opposite direction from stated policy.

    Thin at both ends

    For students who can’t relocate – a substantial population in Wales, given the geography, lower average incomes, and caring responsibilities – part-time study is theoretically the escape valve. The OU in Wales accounts for 53 per cent of part-time undergraduate provision. Strip out the OU and face-to-face part-time provision is extremely thin.

    Some subjects have grown in part-time mode – psychology (190 per cent increase), social sciences (152 per cent), law (156 per cent) – but others have contracted – engineering part-time undergraduate non-degree fell 48 per cent, education part-time postgraduate taught (PGT) fell 39 per cent.

    The part-time route is narrowing in subject range at the same time as face-to-face full-time provision concentrates geographically. And the OU doesn’t provide the campus experience, specialist facilities, or professional placements that facilities-heavy, studio-based, or professionally accredited subjects require.

    What Medr doesn’t say

    Perhaps the most telling section of the report is Section 6 – “Additional areas to consider for future work.” It reads as a roadmap of known unknowns. Medr flags:

    • cross-border flows by subject – why are Welsh students leaving, and where are they going?
    • the pipeline from vocational qualifications – not just A-levels – subject choices by personal characteristics – are certain demographic groups more locked out?
    • the spread of Welsh-domiciled enrolments relative to potential population, graduate outcomes by subject, and the availability of staff able to teach through the medium of Welsh.

    Medr is also explicit that its supply and demand analysis is a crude capacity test – it doesn’t take any account of whether the student’s exact choice of course or type of provider would be available. That caveat does a lot of work.

    Even where headline supply meets headline demand, students can be pushed out of Wales because the specialism they want isn’t offered, is offered only at one provider, or is offered in a form they can’t access. “No shortage” at subject-group level isn’t the same as “choice exists.”

    And there’s no financial sustainability overlay – no modelling of what happens if declining subjects continue to decline, and no connection to workforce planning or the Welsh economy’s skills needs.

    What happens now?

    The minister asked for an overview and got one – thorough, meticulously sourced, and almost entirely descriptive. The question is what she does with it.

    A data report without a policy response is an expensive act of documentation. And the clock is ticking – every year of further decline in vulnerable subjects makes recovery harder and more expensive, while every year without a cross-border flow analysis leaves the biggest explanatory gap unfilled.

    There’s a prior question about who can actually respond. Welsh universities can’t be directed to open or sustain specific programmes. Medr has funding levers (declining in value) and a strategic overview role, but it isn’t clear whether it has, or wants, the directive planning powers that would let it intervene at subject level. Welsh government can set policy priorities and attach conditions to funding, but detailed programme-level steering from ministers would cut against the institutional autonomy the sector jealously guards.

    The whole rationale for creating Medr was to replace siloed regulation with a body capable of taking a whole-system view – but taking a view and having the tools to act on it aren’t the same thing. Whether the planning architecture exists to use it is the question nobody seems keen to answer.

    There’s a structural question the report never addresses. Many of the problems Medr documents – thin standalone cohorts, unsustainable Welsh-medium provision, narrow local menus – look different if you question whether the single-honours degree model is itself part of the problem. Major/minor structures, credit accumulation across providers, and interdisciplinary programmes could sustain subject breadth without every discipline carrying a viable cohort alone.

    Welsh-medium credits could be woven into predominantly English-medium programmes without requiring full parallel degrees. A version of the LLE could theoretically enable this – but Wales has shown little appetite thus far that would make it real. The report’s subject-by-subject framing may inadvertently reinforce the assumption that the answer to fragility is always “more standalone programmes” when it could sometimes be “different programme architecture.”

    Several European systems treat this kind of diagnostic data as a trigger for active planning. The Netherlands requires institutions to demonstrate need for new programmes and address overlap – treating subject availability as a national portfolio problem. Denmark has agreed institution-specific intake reductions, steering student places centrally. Finland uses negotiated performance agreements; France makes the national programme map visible through Parcoursup.

    The difficulty is that despite a strong “mobility” agenda, Dutch, Danish, Finnish, and French students aren’t routinely crossing into neighbouring jurisdictions with shared fees and frictionless admissions. Welsh students are. This report compares Welsh-domiciled demand against home-fee places at Welsh providers – but “home fee” includes English, Scottish, and Northern Irish students competing for the same places.

    Any planning response treating Wales as self-contained will collide with the reality that Welsh HE operates in a UK-wide market where cross-border flows are a feature, not a bug. That makes continental-style programme planning harder to operationalise, though it doesn’t make the diagnostic less relevant.

    Several of the findings cry out for a planning response regardless. If creative arts and performing arts show structural excess demand, is there a case for funded provision expansion? If languages are concentrated in a single vulnerable institution, is there a resilience strategy? If Welsh-medium provision is declining in the subjects that matter most for economic growth, does that require targeted funding, a staffing pipeline, or both? If the system is heavily dependent on English student recruitment, what happens when demographics or competitor behaviour change that flow?

    Medr’s report doesn’t answer those questions, and it isn’t clear that Medr was asked to. Nor is it clear that it could take on a directive planning role or continue to operate primarily as an information service with funding levers that have increasingly diminishing influence.

    What the report does do is make it very difficult for anyone to claim they didn’t know.

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  • What did the three wise men, Ron DEARING, John BROWNE & Philip AUGAR, say about student loan interest?

    What did the three wise men, Ron DEARING, John BROWNE & Philip AUGAR, say about student loan interest?

    Nick Hillman OBE, HEPI’s Director, takes a look back at the Dearing, Browne and Augar reports to see what lessons – if any – they hold for those campaigning against student loans today.

    It is (very) often said that the best way to resolve problems in the student loans system would be to set up a committee of the great and the good to opine.

    The general assumption seems to be that the current system is so obviously broken that getting a few wise heads together would guarantee reforms to please all those angry at the current state of their Plan 2 debts. Perhaps.

    But it is far from guaranteed. There have been three major reports covering student finance in the last 30 years: the Dearing report of 1997; the Browne report of 2010; and the Augar report of 2019.

    Some people think we are overdue another, yet there is no big higher education issue that these previous reports ignored and we can still learn from them.

    Reprinted below is what each of the three says about the most controversial issue affecting today’s Plan 2 student loans: whether they should have a real rate of interest applied. 

    Perhaps the most notable thing is that that, while – on ‘balance’ – the Dearing report wanted no real rate of interest on student loans in common with many of today’s campaigners, the other two reports most definitely did.

    Browne wanted a 2.2% real rate of interest on top of RPI, albeit mitigated by a ‘targeted interest rate subsidy’ to ensure low earners’ debts did not grow in real terms, while Augar also favoured a real interest rate (after study rather than during study and with repayments capped so that no one would pay back more than 1.2 times what they borrowed).

    Perhaps these complicated mitigations (especially Browne’s) would satisfy today’s campaigners, though that is far from certain – after all, the most vociferous of the contemporary complainants are among the highest-earning graduates and none of them seems to have been pacified by the fact that the current system includes a mitigation of its own: one poorly understood but important feature of the current system is that, among graduates, the full 6.2% interest (3% plus RPI at 3.2%) is only applied to the loans of those on salaries that are significantly above the average. That is why the loudest contemporary complaints are coming from MPs, journalists at long-standing national outlets (like the New Statesman) and, above all, doctors.

    The Dearing, Brown and Augar reports are worth revisiting for other reasons too. All three took a different view from today’s campaigners on how the loans system should treat the very richest graduates: those who can repay their loans most quickly of all, assuming they take on any student debt in the first place.

    Dearing, Browne and Augar all knew the Treasury likes to loan out as little money as possible and to recover as much as it can as quickly as possible.

    That explains why Dearing, Browne and Augar all felt it was a positive feature that students from richer families ending up in high-paid jobs would face lower loans and quicker repayments:

    • Dearing wanted ‘to maximise the proportion of students who pay in advance rather than taking up a loan’ via a discount for early repayment;
    • Browne favoured a real interest rate so that ‘Families with high household incomes will be more likely to pay upfront voluntarily’; and
    • while the Augar report favoured no real rate of interest during study, it nonetheless still wanted loans to grow in line with inflation during study ‘to mitigate the risk of wealthy students taking on debt for investment purposes’.

    In other words, rich people not using the loan system to the same degree as others has generally been regarded as a feature, not a bug. We don’t make rich people buy their cars on hire purchase or compel them to have a mortgage. Similarly, the Treasury neither forces richer students to borrow more than they need to from the generality of taxpayers nor forces richer graduates to pay their loans back more slowly than they want to.

    The Treasury’s goal is to look after the nation’s purse and giving people more money than they need or delaying them from paying back what they owe would seem perverse to Treasury officials.

    My experience inside a Government Department helped me understand this because, during the Coalition years, I saw close up how quick the Treasury was to kill the Liberal Democrats’ idea of penalising early student loan repayments. Whether people like it or not, the Treasury rules the roost.

    Above all, the extracts below culled from the triumvirate of Dearing, Browne and Augar serve, if nothing else, as a reminder that some sort of major review of student finance, were one to happen, would not be guaranteed to deliver what today’s campaigners want.

    [NB Let me give a special shoutout to the Education in the UK website, which includes the full text of the Dearing report – the other two reports (Browne and Augar) remain available on the Government’s website.]

    The Dearing report (1997)

    20.86 Given the need to release substantial resources in the short term, as described in Chapter 17, we believe that the Government should structure any new arrangements for contributions to tuition costs so as to maximise the proportion of students who pay in advance rather than taking up a loan. Means testing the access to the loan or introducing a real interest rate would increase this proportion without additional incentives being offered. If neither of these options is pursued, we believe that there is a strong case for the introduction of a discount along the lines of the Australian model. Further detailed work would be necessary to determine the appropriate level of discount and ensure that the arrangements provided value for money over the longer term, as well as releasing additional funds in the short term.

    20.92 The previous Government’s experience with the ‘twin-track’ scheme, which would have involved both the Student Loans Company and the banks lending to students, demonstrated how hard it is to involve the private sector in heavily regulated and subsidised lending schemes at a price which offers any advantage to the taxpayer. We spent some time investigating whether we could design a loans scheme which was more like a commercial scheme and, therefore, more likely to be attractive to private sector lenders. In doing so, we still held to the principle that there should be income contingent repayment arrangements. We found that moving to a rate of interest which is close to a commercial rate of interest (the current scheme has an interest rate equivalent only to the Retail Prices Index) created certain problems. The protection of income contingent arrangements for the low paid means that a significant minority of graduates would be making repayments which did not even cover the interest on their loan, let alone repay the debt. Their debts would, therefore, continue to grow through life becoming, in some cases, very large before write-off. Even though individuals would be protected from unreasonable debt-servicing burdens, we felt that the possibility of an ever-rising debt would be a deterrent to participation in higher education. Although the same difficulty can arise with any real rate of interest, it is severe with commercial interest rates. We were told that the Australians had considered real interest rates for their Higher Education Contributions scheme, but had rejected them for the same reasons.

    20.93 We also considered whether a mutual scheme might help to make a contributions scheme more attractive as a commercial proposition. Under a mutual scheme, all those taking out loans would be liable to pay not only the sum borrowed, but the sum borrowed plus a premium of perhaps 20 per cent to cover the payment of the commitments of those who will never earn enough to pay their commitments. It would seek to deal with two of the main problems with loan schemes:

    • the percentage of individuals who will never repay their loans, which represents a loss of income;
    • the impossibility of individuals, or those making loans, identifying in advance who is unlikely to pay.

    20.94 This approach also increases the amount paid by those graduates on higher incomes; and may thereby provide an incentive for individuals who are confident about their future earning potential to pay up front. While this might be desirable in terms of short term increases in funding, it risks undermining the basis of the loan scheme by negative selection. Only those with the poorest prospects would take out the loan, which would increase the size of the mutual premium required to cover non-repayment. This would encourage even more of those with better prospects to opt out, leading to a scheme which was unstable. To avoid this, it would be possible to require all students, whether they took out a loan or not, to make a 20 per cent contribution to the loan fund. That would, however, be simply equivalent to requiring a higher contribution from all.

    20.95 Although we find the concept of the mutual scheme attractive, we have concluded that it is unlikely to provide a funding approach that is stable in the long term. In the light of these considerations, we have concluded that the twin-track approach has fundamental difficulties that cannot be readily overcome.

    21.18 The largest element of subsidy in the current student loans scheme is the interest rate subsidy (ie the difference between the Retail Prices Index-linked rate of interest charged to students, and the cost to the Government of borrowing the funds). Some of those who submitted evidence to us argued that this ‘hidden’ subsidy should be reduced, or even removed entirely, and the funds released used to provide more targeted support.

    21.19 There are a number of arguments for this approach:

    • it would produce a material increase in revenue from loan contributions over the medium to long term. However, this would be limited by the introduction of an income contingent contributions regime. This is because the contributions which individuals make under an income contingent scheme are determined by their income, rather than the interest rate: for those on low incomes, the effect of an increase in the interest rate is to substitute contributions to interest for the contribution to repayment of principal, so ultimately a larger proportion of principal is written off on cancellation;
    • if the interest rate was set at a level which met the Government’s cost of borrowing, there would be no ongoing subsidy paid by the Government, other than the eventual cost of default or cancellation. It would, therefore, matter less if contributions were spread over a longer period than now;
    • if access to the scheme is not means tested, and the interest rate is heavily subsidised, there is a real risk that students who do not need the facility will make use of it anyway and reinvest the money to secure a net financial gain. Real interest rates would reduce the subsidy and this risk (thus also reducing costs).

    21.20 Real interest rates can, however, have the effect of increasing the burden for those on lower incomes. To avoid that, it would be possible to prevent the level of graduates’ outstanding obligations increasing in real terms, while their incomes were too low for them to make contributions, by charging a zero real interest rate during those periods. Those on low incomes would also be protected because, although the size of their outstanding loans might rise over their working lives, their monthly contributions would be capped, and the outstanding debt would ultimately be cancelled (see paragraphs 21.23 and 21.24).

    21.21 Those on low incomes who paid in full, however, would pay more in total than those on high incomes who paid their total contribution quickly. With a zero real interest rate, by contrast, the highest subsidies go to those on the lowest incomes. The existence of a real rate might be a disincentive to participation by students worried about escalation of debt after graduation.

    21.22 Clearly there is a balance of considerations. The differences in income to the Government, and in charges to graduates, from rates of interest of 2.5 and 5 per cent amount to some £100 million a year initially, rising to £200 – £300 million a year in 20 years’ time. Providing contributions are income contingent, and that rates of interest are limited to 2.5 per cent (ie the rate of inflation) during the years of studentship or during periods of sickness or unemployment, the burden for graduates in work need not be heavy. But that has to be balanced against the potential risk of discouraging participation in higher education. This risk led us to the view that any rate of interest should be linked to the rate of inflation.

    The Browne report (2010)

    The current system does have some attractive features but it does not produce progressive effects. No students pay any interest on their loans. This means that even the wealthiest students after graduation receive a subsidy from Government – typically £3,000 – whereas that subsidy could be targeted on students on lower incomes. Wealthy students and families who understand the way the subsidy works realise they are being paid by the Government to borrow money and some will do so regardless of whether they have a genuine need.

    By contrast – because the current system is poorly understood – many other students and their families are worried by the fact that they run up debt by going into higher education. In these discussions of debt, student loan obligations are still grouped alongside credit card debts and commercial mortgage style loans, as if they are all the same.

    Another as-yet hidden problem in the current system is that the threshold at which payments begin has not changed since the 2006 reforms. It has remained constant at £15,000, even though earnings have grown in the meantime. This means that students who were regarded as low earners before 2006 – and not required to make payments – are now earning above the threshold and so they are making payments. If the threshold remains as it is, soon even a student working full time on the minimum wage after graduation will have to make payments. That is unacceptable.

    To deal with these issues, we will make the following changes to how the current system works to create the new SF (Student Finance) Paying system:

    • Students with higher earnings will pay a real interest rate. The interest rate will be equal to the Government’s cost of borrowing (inflation plus 2.2%). 
    • Students earning below the repayment threshold will pay no real interest rate. Their loan balance will increase only in line with inflation.
    • Those earning marginally above the threshold whose payments do not cover the costs of the real interest will have the rest of the interest rebated to them by Government.
    • The repayment threshold will be reviewed regularly and increased in line with average earnings. As the threshold has not been increased since 2005, there will be a one-off increase at the start of our new system from £15,000 to £21,000.
    • Changing the threshold in line with earnings increases the costs of loans for Government. Some of that cost will be offset by increasing the maximum payment period from 25 to 30 years. After 30 years, any outstanding balance will be written off by Government.

    The introduction of a real interest rate will remove the perverse incentives around loan take up and fee deferral. Families with high household incomes will be more likely to pay upfront voluntarily and graduates with very high earnings will be more likely to choose to make early payments to clear their obligation. Both of these behaviours will ease the cash borrowing requirement for Government, focus the Government support for students on those who need it and make the Student Finance Plan as a whole more sustainable.

    It will mean that the student from a wealthy household who goes on to become a high earning graduate will no longer benefit from any public subsidy. Even if this student took up the full amount of maintenance loan for the costs of living and paid no fees upfront, the public purse will receive in time payments equal to the net present value of the costs paid by Government upfront.

    At the other end of the earnings scale, the targeted interest rate subsidy means that the outstanding balance of low earners will not grow in real terms – and, if they never earn enough to pay back the costs of living and learning, then after 30 years these will be written off by Government.

    We envisage that the lowest paid graduates – or those who take significant breaks from work to fulfil other responsibilities – will pay no more than they do in the current system; whereas students who go on to have successful careers after graduating will pay more.

    Our proposals also create the potential for Government to review the restrictions on access to funding to students who are studying for a second degree. The ability to re-train will be increasingly important in a changing economy. As more students will pay back the costs of learning in full in our proposals, access to upfront support for the costs of learning could be expanded.

    The Augar reprt (2019)

    Currently students are charged an interest rate 3 percentage points above the level of inflation whilst studying – i.e. before the point when they can reasonably be expected to begin to make repayments. This particular feature has attracted widespread criticism, including in responses to our call for evidence. At current inflation rates, a new student doing a one-year Level 4 HE course in 2018, taking out maximum HE maintenance and fee loans, will take a loan of £17,950 and by the time they enter their repayment term this will have increased to £19,250 – a rise of £700 for inflation with an addition of £650 in-study interest. A new 3-year degree student in 2018 taking out maximum HE maintenance and fee loans will see £3,800 added to their debt during their study years because of the above-inflation interest element. Students on longer courses will accrue even greater in-study interest, owing to both their larger balance and the longer duration spent under the in-study interest regime. A student studying for 5 years could accrue £10,000 in real interest while they are studying (e.g. if a student enrolled on a 4-year Master’s course and retook one year). …

    A key part of the government’s case for in-study interest is that it deters students from taking on student loans if they can self-finance their education. In the absence of any in-study interest students would have an incentive to take out a loan and instead of using it to pay their student fees, could invest it. The in-study interest also has the effect of increasing the overall contribution made by high earners because it is they who predominantly repay this interest – helping to make the system progressive – whereas most lower earners will not repay it because it will form part of the remaining debt written off at the end of their loan term.

    However, this interest serves to increase all borrowers’ debt balances when most borrowers are in no position to make payments, adding to concerns about rising debt levels … . Furthermore, some lower earners – albeit a minority – will repay this interest. These repayment terms apply not only to students taking full degrees with large loan balances but also to many other borrowers, for example those taking Advanced Learner Loans (ALLs). ALLs, which are typically taken out by older adults with quite low initial achievement levels, can be far smaller and these borrowers may well repay in full – including in-study interest. We consider that there should continue to be a single set of repayment terms at Level 6 and below, across different routes, and that this should be as fair as possible for all borrowers. Furthermore, the extension to the repayment period we are proposing would increase the proportion of students having to eventually repay this interest.

    We consider it unfair that students should incur an above-inflation increase in their debt while studying full-time at a time when they are unable to generate earnings to start to repay their loan. We do however believe it is fair to increase loan balances with inflation during study, to maintain the real value of the debt and to mitigate the risk of wealthy students taking on debt for investment purposes.

    Recommendation 6.4 Remove real in-study interest, so that loan balances track inflation during study. This should apply for new students entering the system from 2021/22.

    Some of our respondents argued that student loans should never attract real interest – not even for borrowers who have left education and begun earning. We do not accept this view: a level of real interest should continue to be charged on the grounds that it would be imprudent and wasteful for government to provide entirely costless finance. It is worth reiterating the point that the variable interest rate mechanism protects low earners from high real interest rates, while increasing the contribution from higher earners. The provision of loans at zero real interest throughout the whole loan period could encourage almost all students to take out loans (as opposed to paying fees with their own funds) and to continue to hold this ‘debt’ throughout the contribution period as it may eventually be written off. This would be at considerable additional cost to government at the expense of investment elsewhere in tertiary education.

    Recommendation 6.5 Retain the post-study variable interest rate mechanism from inflation to inflation plus 3 per cent.

    Some feedback in the call for evidence questioned the use of the Retail Price Index (RPI) rather than the Consumer Price index (CPI) as the appropriate measure of inflation in the student loan system. We have also considered recommendations from the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee’s recent report Measuring Inflation, and the joint letter from this committee and the House of Commons Treasury Committee to the UK National Statistician regarding the need to reform the RPI measure. We recognise widespread concerns about the quality of the RPI measure, but note that HMT continues to use RPI in a range of cases, especially for inward payments (e.g. interest) as distinct from outward payments (e.g. pensions). This is a matter for the Treasury; different inflation measures are in use in different areas of public finance and we recognise a change would need to be considered in a wider context than the student loan system alone.

    A student borrower’s debt and repayment profile is particularly sensitive to the trajectory of their lifetime earnings. In a system with real interest some borrowers will repay more than 100 per cent of their initial loan, and those that pay back more slowly – in the middle to upper end of the earnings distribution – can pay proportionally more than the very highest earners who are exposed to real interest for a shorter time. In the words of the Treasury Select Committee Report into student loans: ‘ … the civil servant, the teacher and the accountant pay broadly similar amounts for their loan, but a graduate joining a “magic circle” law firm pays less, owing to rapid pay growth in the early stages of their career.’

    … The earner at the 95th percentile repays more quickly and spends less time accruing interest than the earner at the 90th percentile, resulting in the 90th percentile borrower repaying more in real terms over their lifetime, for the same starting balance. The system is therefore not producing progressive outcomes for this part of the earnings distribution.

    We acknowledge that over the longer repayment period recommended by the panel the problem would be somewhat exacerbated. We considered a wide range of options for solving this difficult issue. If real interest is charged, some borrowers are bound to accrue more interest than others, so we have sought mechanisms to limit the extent to which the highest earners paid back into the system less than those in the deciles below.

    Options we considered included the adjusting of interest charges and thresholds; the addition of a further higher threshold with higher interest charges; forgiving unpaid interest each year; and an additional fixed charge on the highest earners who had cleared their loan. Many of these resulted in higher costs to the taxpayer due to the inefficient targeting of borrowers, benefiting fast high earners in particular. Some options incentivised fast high earners to opt out of the loan system altogether or to accelerate the repayment of their loan; in such cases the highest earners of all would be contributing less in interest overall to the system than borrowers with lower earnings. Other options would have been scored as a tax under accounting rules and hence are beyond our terms of reference.

    We concluded that the most efficient way of addressing this problem would be to introduce a cap on real terms total repayments. Any borrower that reached the cap would have the remainder of their loan written off at that point (all of which would be accrued interest). We propose that this cap be set at a multiple of 1.2 times the initial loan in real terms. This level of cap broadly limits borrowers to a similar maximum level of repayment to that which was being contributed by the highest earners (relative to the initial loan). Because the protection of the cap is only triggered if a borrower has already fully repaid the real value of the initial loan, it is well targeted at a specific group of borrowers. Because it scales with the initial loan amount it would protect borrowers with any size of loan in a proportional way. Given the number of permutations of initial balance and earnings in each year of a borrower’s working life, there could be some instances where borrowers with lower lifetime earnings would repay proportionally slightly more than someone with higher lifetime earnings, but we believe this mechanism is the best available for limiting the number and extent of such instances.

    We would expect the Student Loans Company (SLC) to monitor the real value of the initial loan, alongside the other data it holds on repayments, and regularly notify the borrower of the proportion of the real loan repaid and when the cap had been reached. Although the cap is a component of the new system we recommend that the government implement the same cap for graduate borrowers who are still repaying their Plan 2 loans. While this would not affect most borrowers, it would increase the fairness of the system.

    Recommendation 6.6 Introduce a new protection for borrowers to cap lifetime repayments at 1.2 times the initial loan amount in real terms. This cap should be introduced for all current Plan 2 borrowers, as well for all future borrowers.

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  • Congress, Courts Stymie Trump’s Effort to Cap Research Costs

    Congress, Courts Stymie Trump’s Effort to Cap Research Costs

    The National Institutes of Health and other federal agencies can’t make any changes to how universities are reimbursed for costs indirectly related to research until at least Sept. 30, under the recently passed budget bills that President Trump signed into law.

    The legislation ends a yearlong effort from the Trump administration to cap reimbursements for indirect research costs at 15 percent. The average reimbursement rate for institutions is 27 to 28 percent, though some colleges have negotiated reimbursement rates greater than 50 percent.

    When the NIH announced Feb. 7, 2025, that it would cap the rates, colleges and universities warned they would have to cut costs or research operations to make up the difference. The funding for indirect costs helps to pay for hazardous waste disposal, utilities and patient safety. The rate cap would’ve saved about $4 billion, the NIH said.

    But lawsuits quickly led to court orders that blocked the NIH from capping the rates. And then the National Science Foundation as well as the Energy and Defense Departments also sought to put a 15 percent cap in place—policies that federal judges also blocked. The Trump administration has appealed the decisions, so litigation continues.

    Now, Congress has weighed in as well, blocking any changes to the reimbursement rates for fiscal year 2026, which ends Sept. 30. That legislation led the Energy Department to formally announce that its policy changes related to indirect research costs were no longer in effect. Likewise, a Pentagon official told Inside Higher Ed that “the department is not presently working toward changes to indirect cost rates.” The NIH and NSF didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    Cost Cuts Still Loom

    But the conversation about funding indirect research costs likely isn’t over. The legislation also directed the agencies to work with universities on ways to improve the funding model for research. Lawmakers say there’s room for improvement in the current system, “particularly with respect to the need for greater transparency into these costs.”

    The legislation specifically mentions the proposal from 10 higher education associations that would overhaul how the government funds research. That proposal, the Financial Accountability in Research (FAIR) model, would break up research costs into three buckets: research performance costs (the current direct costs), essential research performance support (current indirect costs) and general research operations (institutionwide services that are necessary for research that are currently lumped into the indirect cost category).

    The 10 associations, collectively known as the Joint Associations Group, came together to rethink the research funding model because they realized that something was going to change with or without the input of universities. The FAIR model is aimed at increasing accountability and clarity in how federal research funding is spent, according to JAG.

    Nearly 300 national organizations, including scientific societies, patient advocacy groups and funding foundations, wrote to Congress last fall in support of JAG’s plan and asked for a two-year transition period to any new funding model.

    “We believe that the recommendations put forward by the JAG would enhance transparency and accountability associated with federally funded research without undermining overall support critical to American science,” the letter stated. “While granular details of the model will need to continue to be refined through its implementation process, we believe the core of the model addresses the themes that lawmakers and policymakers have prioritized while also ensuring American leadership in science and innovation continues.”

    As for JAG, it applauded Congress for supporting indirect research costs.

    “We thank Congress—and particularly the leadership and appropriators in each chamber—for ensuring continued support for all the costs associated with advancing American science, and for continuing to engage with the JAG on the FAIR model.”

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  • The Fight Over Community College Bachelor’s Degrees

    The Fight Over Community College Bachelor’s Degrees

    Last month, state lawmakers in Iowa introduced a bill that would allow community colleges to offer four-year degrees—and unwittingly triggered a turf war.

    While community college advocates argued the lower-cost degrees would benefit students in a state with vast rural expanses and education deserts, private universities countered that community colleges are stepping out of bounds and infringing on their territory. Greg Steinke, the president of the Iowa Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, even went so far as to say the move could put some institutions out of business, telling lawmakers a few weeks ago that “without any question and without any doubt,” if the bill passed, “some of our private colleges will close.”

    Legislators got the message. On Jan. 28, the Iowa House higher education committee amended the bill to impose some limits. Community college baccalaureate degrees would be introduced as a pilot program: Two-year institutions would be allowed to offer no more than three baccalaureate degrees, and only if they are at least 50 miles away from a university offering a similar option.

    Emily Shields, executive director of Community Colleges for Iowa, said she was surprised by the level of resistance from universities. State lawmakers tasked her organization with producing a report on the feasibility of bringing community college baccalaureate degrees to Iowa, which found “a pretty clear need” for more bachelor’s degree options in the state, she said—especially for students who are place-bound or concerned about costs.

    “We don’t see this as an existential threat to any of [the universities], and that certainly isn’t the goal,” said Shields. “I really don’t think there’s evidence from other states to back up that fear.”

    Steinke said the evidence lies in how the free market works.

    “Students and consumers will go to the cheapest place,” he said. “It will be a struggle, and there are some of our institutions that won’t be able to tolerate the struggle. Some of the presidents of my association … don’t like me to say that, because they don’t want the word out there that they could close,” he added. “But how can there be any other outcome?”

    Similar negotiations—and tensions—are playing out across the country as community college baccalaureate degrees expand and pique the interest of state lawmakers. More than 200 community colleges in 24 states now offer a total of at least 767 bachelor’s degrees, according to the Community College Baccalaureate Association (CCBA). And that number is bound to grow as a handful of new states consider introducing these options.

    Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker threw his support behind community college baccalaureate degrees last year, and two-year colleges in the state continue to advocate for legislation to make them happen. Massachusetts already has one community college offering four-year degrees, but college leaders hope to expand the opportunity to more, said Angela Kersenbrock, president of the CCBA. And other states—including Maryland and Nebraska—are exploring the possibility or considering expansions.

    Kersenbrock described the moment as a near “tipping point” for the community college baccalaureate movement, with almost half of states now embracing these degrees.

    Lawmakers are drawn to the option because “it’s the right thing to do,” she said. When states need more trained workers—and universities are at capacity or don’t offer certain workforce-oriented bachelor’s degree programs—community college baccalaureate degrees are a way to “really leverage what community colleges do best, and that is responding to labor market needs.”

    Bipartisan Support

    Such programs enjoy rare bipartisan support, cropping up in Democratic-led states like California and Washington, as well as in Republican strongholds such as Texas and Florida.

    “Community college baccalaureates are not red and they’re not blue,” Kersenbrock said. “They sit right in the middle  … We need more talent, and we have people in our communities who can do this job. Why not give people the opportunity?”

    She noted that the programs have become especially popular in states with large rural areas to prevent students from moving away to attend universities. Many lead to applied baccalaureate degrees in specific workforce-oriented fields—such as respiratory therapy or dental hygiene—which appeal to states or regions seeking to address worker shortages.

    For example, Feather River College, a small rural institution in California, has graduated 99 students from its ecosystem restoration and applied fire management as well as equine and ranch management programs, “high-need fields in a region facing extreme fire risk and economic vulnerability,” James Todd, vice chancellor of academic affairs for the California Community Colleges system, wrote in an email.

    “For many students in that region, pursuing a bachelor’s degree elsewhere simply is not feasible,” Todd said. The nearest public four-year university is more than 80 miles away.

    An intentional fire was set at Feather River College to ensure the health of its forested campus. The campus now has an ecosystem restoration and applied fire management bachelor’s degree to train students in such practices. 

    Feather River College

    Over the last decade, California community colleges got approval for more than 50 bachelor’s degree programs, offered by roughly 40 colleges across the state. The number of students admitted to the 11 bachelor’s degree programs offered by Maricopa Community Colleges in Arizona has grown 15 percent year over year. The system expects to hit 10,000 enrolled students this year and plans to more than double its number of baccalaureate programs by 2032. Currently, 61 percent of those enrolled are first-generation college students, and 78.4 percent are continuing or former students within the community college system.

    “In just two years, we have seen extraordinary growth with our bachelor’s degree programs, which is undoubtedly associated with the lower per-credit-hour cost,” Steven R. Gonzales, chancellor of Maricopa Community Colleges, said in a news release. A bachelor’s degree at Arizona State University for an in-state student can cost up to $47,000. At Maricopa Community Colleges, students from the county can earn a bachelor’s for $14,550.

    Simon Kaminski, who is earning a bachelor of applied science in data analytics and programming at Mesa Community College, said thanks to a scholarship, his degree is going to cost him roughly $3,000.

    “I pretty much paid nothing for a bachelor’s degree, which is always amazing,” he said.

    Kaminski found out Mesa offered bachelor’s degrees after he earned his associate degree there, and said he was “shocked” that was even an option. The low-cost opportunity to continue on at a campus that was already familiar felt too good to pass up. And he’s glad he did, he said, both because of the price and the program’s focus on hands-on projects.

    Preston Cooper, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, pointed out in a blog post last week that even as they grow, two-year-college baccalaureate programs remain relatively small. In 2021–22, out of the more than two million bachelor’s degrees awarded nationally, community colleges accounted for just over 15,000 four-year degrees.

    Nonetheless, he believes that allowing community colleges “to apply their low-cost model to bachelor’s degrees” is a net positive because it can drive “competition that could force the rest of the higher education system to reduce costs, too.”

    Ongoing Tensions

    But in Iowa and elsewhere, not everyone is eager for more competition.

    Four-year colleges and universities have long tried to prevent their two-year counterparts from introducing bachelor’s programs, worried that community colleges are encroaching on their signature offerings. Their leaders argue that two-year institutions should be investing in better transfer processes to bachelor’s degree–granting institutions, not standing up their own.

    Sometimes it seems like a losing argument.

    In 2021, after years of advocacy, Arizona passed legislation permitting community college baccalaureate degrees, despite staunch opposition from the Arizona Board of Regents, which represents the University of Arizona, Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University. (The programs aren’t allowed to replicate university offerings, but four-year institutions don’t have veto power over which programs are approved.) A similar conflict broke out in Idaho last year when four-year colleges opposed a proposal for a bachelor of applied science in business administration at the College of Western Idaho, partly over concerns it duplicated their programs.

    Students sit in turquoise chairs in front of computers. A professor stands behind a desk at the front of the room in front of a projector.

    Students earning a bachelor’s degree in artificial intelligence at Chandler-Gilbert Community College attend class.

    Maricopa Community Colleges

    Now the California State University system and California Community Colleges are battling over a set of proposed baccalaureate programs that CSU flagged as duplicative. Sixteen proposed degrees are at issue, including seven first proposed in 2023.

    For some of the programs, only one CSU campus has objected, whereas for others, “seven or eight CSUs have said, ‘When we look at the courses, the curriculum and the outcomes and what types of roles these are filling, these are absolutely duplicative of programs that we have,’” said Nathan Evans, associate vice chancellor of academic affairs for the CSU system.

    But he also stressed that the two systems are trying to “work toward the same objective of creating access to postsecondary opportunities in California.”

    Todd, of the California community college system, stands behind community colleges’ process for determining duplication, noting that colleges must submit “extensive documentation” demonstrating unmet workforce need and an analysis of how the proposed program compares to existing CSU and University of California offerings.

    “Deliberative conversations” are underway with CSU representatives about the proposals in limbo, Todd said. “It would be premature to comment on the next steps until those conversations have concluded.”

    This is a familiar pattern. In California, the community college and four-year systems have repeatedly duked it out over such proposals since a 2021 California law first allowed community colleges to stand up new baccalaureate degree programs. Under the law, community colleges can apply to offer up to 30 new four-year programs annually if the programs don’t replicate existing programs at state universities. That is evaluated in a review process with representatives of the California State University system and the University of California system, followed by approval from the California Community College system chancellor’s office.

    Those reviews have grown so contentious that the community college system contracted the nonprofit WestEd last year to analyze possible duplication issues and ways to improve the review process with the CSU system. WestEd’s report, released last summer, concluded that the systems seem to be working with different definitions of “unnecessary duplication,” and while there is overlap between proposed and existing programs, CSU’s objections can be overly broad. Evans said CSU’s faculty concerns, and ways of defining duplication, weren’t appropriately factored into the WestEd study.

    Legislation to introduce new types of community college baccalaureate degrees have also been a recent source of contention in the state. Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill in 2024 that would have allowed community colleges to offer a bachelor of science in nursing, arguing that systems should be collaborating on nursing education and the bill could “inadvertently hurt” partnerships. More recent legislation that would allow Southwestern College to offer up to four more bachelor’s degrees—in applied forensic science, allied health education and leadership, teaching English to non-English speakers, and web design—has advanced to the California Senate, despite opposition from the CSU and UC systems.

    The programs proposed in the bill are “designed to complement, not compete with, the four-year universities,” Todd said.

    But Evans sees such bills as “problematic because they’re not thinking big picture,” he argued. “These are just sort of nibbling around the edges, creating friction” versus taking a more “wholesale” approach to student access and sorting out differences over community colleges’ four-year degrees.

    Reaching Agreements

    Despite these squabbles, some potential models for collaboration are emerging.

    Brian Durham, executive director of the Illinois Community College Board, said he’s “hopeful” his state will adopt community college baccalaureate degrees soon, in part because the colleges “negotiated pretty extensively” with universities, which pushed back on legislation proposed last year.

    A new agreed-upon version, which the board expects to see introduced this year, offers the universities multiple opportunities for input on new baccalaureate programs and puts limits on the number of nursing programs per region to avoid “too much competition,” Durham said. As a result, Illinois university leaders have since adopted a more neutral stance.

    A statement from a coalition of public and private university leaders last year said that the group “will take no position on the merits” but acknowledged that “the shifting landscape of higher education, heightened uncertainty, and our commitment to our institutions and the students of Illinois require us to be vigilant and monitor the implementation of this proposal.”

    Steinke, of the Iowa Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, said the guardrails put in place matter. He contended that the conversation in his state might have gone differently if Iowa community colleges and universities initially worked together to develop a set of unique programs that universities don’t cover.

    Evans, of the CSU system, agreed there are ways to improve tensions between the two sectors. For example, representatives from both the CSU and California Community Colleges are exploring ways to communicate earlier about possible program duplications, rather than hash it out after colleges have already gone through the labor of drafting intensive proposals. Newsom’s administration is also working to set up a California Education Intersegmental Council to ensure better coordination between the state’s two-year and four-year higher ed systems.

    Kersenbrock emphasized that universities are “a major resource for this country” and community college baccalaureate advocates “don’t want them to get hurt at all.”

    Creating community college baccalaureate degrees “takes real, intentional work. It takes trust on everybody’s side. It takes assurances,” she said.

    At the same time, she believes smaller, private four-year universities that attract out-of-state students may need to reckon with whether their programs serve the same state needs that community college programs do.

    “I think you have to just ask those questions,” she said.

    Durham said the growth of community college baccalaureates represents a broader blurring of the lines between higher education sectors right now. For example, dual-enrollment classes for high school students have rapidly expanded at community colleges, and four-year institutions are starting to offer more short-term programs.

    “It reflects the changing landscape of education,” he said. “We are going to have to recognize that there’s some blend happening … and that’s a good thing. Ultimately, it’s about students.”

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  • How did skills take over higher education? One short history

    How did skills take over higher education? One short history

    Over the weekend HEPI published blogs on the freezing of student loan thresholds, and the Westminster Hall debates on duty of care.

    This blog was kindly authored by Dr. Josh Patel, Senior Education and Policy Researcher, Edge Foundation. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the foundation.

    In 2025 the discourse of ‘skills’ dominated education policy, from the post-16 white paper to Skills England’s UK Standard Skills Classification. Skills in this context act as bureaucratic proxies for specific human capacities. Precisely defining and ranking skills makes it possible to identify ‘shortages’, ‘gaps’, and ‘deficits’ relative to political and economic priorities, and to frame them as problems requiring action. These may be specific: last March, Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced building 1.5 million homes would require 60,000 more ‘engineers, brickies, sparkies, and chippies’ by 2029. They may also be general: NFER projections for demand for six ‘Essential Employment Skills’ to 2035 aim to align provision with ‘high growth areas’.

    These developments are deeply contested. Ronald Barnett describes the contemporary fascination with skills as a form of ‘bewitchment’ (others have put it more strongly elsewhere). The language of skills encourages a narrow focus on capacities linked to discrete tasks. When individuals are defined in this way, they become more easily interchangeable in the labour market, increasing workers’ vulnerability. At the same time, prioritising skills training sidelines education that enables learners to understand, question, and transform the world as citizens. This cements inequality and disadvantage. As Barnett has put it even more forcefully, ‘current movements, if left uncontained, herald a new kind of techno-fascism descending onto higher education’.

    Years of this line of criticism have, however, hardly troubled the advance of the skills agenda; indeed, the intensification of criticisms like Barnett’s has coincided with its peak over the last 30 years. This is likely because the historic and ideational mechanisms sustaining skills discourse are not foremost concerned with education or training, or even knowledge, at all. Instead, skills discourse is primarily concerned with public accountability. More specifically, they are a response to questions about what counts as acceptable evidence of accountability, and how learners and university leaders can provide this evidence. I explore these underlying mechanisms in my new book, Universities and the Purpose of Higher Education and here consider how they precipitated the emergence of skills.

    Liberal education, skills, and massification

    Contemporary skills discourse rests on institutional and conceptual arrangements that took shape during the mass expansion of higher education after the Second World War.  At that time, the prevailing governing idea was ‘liberal education’. Social leadership was entrusted to a small cadre of elites bound by a ‘common culture’, based in the study of the virtues of the Classics or literature, and transmitted through a limited number of universities. These elites were revered as possessing the judgement necessary for responsible governance. However, some commentators, like C.P. Snow and later Martin Wiener, were sceptical. They worried that social leaders were afraid of the transformative power of modern technologies as demonstrated by the war. Protective of their own power, they resisted reform, even if this led to national ‘decline’. This was evident in the continued restriction of access to higher education and the denigration of applied studies.

    By the early 1960s, massification was underway. The Robbins Report (1963) cited in its appendices public returns from investment in higher education of 9 percent per annum, yet the report itself warned that overreliance on incomplete measures would undervalue higher education. The full impact of higher education was too complex to be fully measured. Any attempt to do so would necessarily fail to capture higher education’s wider, more subtle, but critical benefits to a free and prosperous society, which I examine in the book. If governments relied too heavily on such measures when allocating resources, they risked underinvesting in higher education and overlooking its full value.  Robbins (an eminent LSE economist) therefore refused to provide a precise accounting. The financial arrangements proposed were, (as Michael Shattock described them) a ‘fudge’. However, Robbins’ judgement in support of expansion, grounded in elite authority still capable of commanding deference, was sufficient to legitimise growth.

    This settlement unravelled as massification continued, and pressure intensified following the social and economic crises of the 1970s. As public finances came under the scrutiny of an expanded political class, universities were seen as failing on several counts: complicit in class and gender inequality (later racial too), and inattentive to national needs (increasingly market-defined). The distribution of national resources could no longer depend on fallible judgment of an elite that was too often self-interested and inefficient.

    Remarkably, Robbins’ 1932 redefinition of economics as a science of scarcity and trade-offs offered a tool for his successors. Although Robbins himself insisted on its strict limits, even incomplete calculations of returns based on inexactly but explicitly defined variables proved politically invaluable. They enabled higher education and the state to apparently eschew judgment and mechanically calculate and evidence their contribution to enumerated political objectives. In an economising climate, it was a short step to try and identify which elements of an education’s most relevant constituent capacities could be isolated and measured (though a step the history of which still needs to be fully told). Atomised skills emerged as the preferred idea of governance.

    Judgment and accountability

    The problem is that this did not eschew judgment – it simply obscured it. It is not that it is wrong to make judgments about what defined variables in education (which skills) can be said to most explicitly serve the social goal we choose. It is also not necessarily the case that we should become bogged down in debates about the technical limits of current metrics. Such measures will always be defended as prudent and necessary in the circumstances.

    Instead, it is important to recognise that when judgments are made about what a skill is and how we use it, that this is never the end of the discussion: making a judgment, as Bill Readings argued, is to surrender the capacity to have the final say and open a dialogue to others to evaluate the grounds on that which your judgment was made. Skills discourses generally prioritise narrowly defined and short-term political ends. Audit and accountability cultures have repeatedly struggled to serve the common good.

    The deeper deficit lies in a political system that now struggles to produce compelling holistic judgments of long-term public value. The turn to skills is best understood as a consequence of this erosion, rather than as its origin. Higher education is not just subject to these regimes. It is where the intellectual tools of governance are formed. Its responsibility extends beyond tinkering with these models to supporting more credible public judgment about the use of shared resources.

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  • HyFlex Success: Practical Lessons from Six Courses – Faculty Focus

    HyFlex Success: Practical Lessons from Six Courses – Faculty Focus

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  • AI shatters the pretence that academic polish was ever anything but gatekeeping

    AI shatters the pretence that academic polish was ever anything but gatekeeping

    Universities are punishing students for doing what journals like Nature and Science explicitly permit their authors to do. This isn’t confusion, it’s gatekeeping masquerading as pedagogy. And in the gap between what universities demand and what the professional academic world has already accepted, we can see the death throes of an entire model of knowledge production.

    Having read several universities’ generative AI policies, my conclusion is clear: they are well-intentioned but fundamentally incoherent. They ask students to use a tool designed to generate content but only let it generate the scaffolding without influencing the building, a nearly impossible task to monitor or self-regulate.

    The policies permit students to use AI for “ideation support” and to “create structure or outline,” but insist that “core ideas” and “core reasoning” must be the student’s own. This creates an invisible line. If a student uses AI to brainstorm ten potential essay angles and chooses one, is that idea theirs or the AI’s? If AI provides an outline, hasn’t it done significant analytical heavy lifting?

    The university is saying: “As long as you do the assembly, it’s your house.” But most educators would argue that designing the blueprint is the most creative and critical part of the process.

    What journals are already doing

    Meanwhile, the professional institutions students are being trained to join have quietly resolved this confusion. This table summarises how the journals are resolving this issue:

    Publisher policies on generative AI

    Publisher Key points of policy Disclosure requirements Authorship rules Implications for authors
    Taylor & Francis Welcomes AI for idea generation, language support, and dissemination. Warns of risks (fabrication, bias). Authors must disclose AI use in manuscripts. Editors/reviewers also guided. AI tools cannot be authors; responsibility lies with humans. Transparent but permissive: disclosure is mandatory, so authors should prepare a clear AI-use statement.
    Elsevier Allows AI for efficiency, readability, and language improvement. Prohibits AI from generating scientific content or conclusions. Disclosure required if AI used in writing. Human oversight mandatory. AI cannot be credited as author; authors retain full accountability. Strictest stance: disclosure always required, and AI cannot generate substantive content.
    Springer Nature Permits AI-assisted copy editing without disclosure. Requires disclosure if AI used for substantive text generation, data analysis, or methods. Must document AI use in methods (or equivalent). Copy-editing only does not require disclosure. AI cannot meet authorship criteria; only humans accountable. More permissive: minor copy-editing can be done without disclosure, but substantive use must be declared.
    Wiley Provides detailed guidelines for ethical AI use. Supports creativity and workflow efficiency but stresses originality and integrity. Transparency required when AI used in manuscript preparation. AI cannot be listed as author; human authorship must be preserved. Balanced: disclosure required, but policy emphasizes ethical creativity rather than prohibition.
    SAGE Recognizes AI’s potential for idea generation, editing, and structuring. Emphasises limits: AI cannot replicate human creativity/critical thinking. Authors must disclose AI use. Editors/reviewers guided on ethical use. AI cannot be listed as author; responsibility remains with humans. Similar to Taylor & Francis: disclosure is mandatory, but AI can be used for supportive tasks.

    The journals are saying: the “polish” is a technical skill that can be outsourced. What matters is the intellectual substance – the diamond – of the research.

    This is a seismic shift. It validates what decolonial pedagogy has long argued: that the obsession with academic register is not about intellectual rigour but about gatekeeping a form of linguistic expression, what Pierre Bourdieu would call cultural capital.

    The gatekeeping model

    This confusion is not accidental. It is symptomatic of a deeper crisis in which the university can no longer coherently perform its dual function of credentialing the professional class while legitimating that process as meritocratic.

    The traditional model fuses the what (idea) and the how (writing). Assessment unconsciously rewards code-fluency over intellectual originality. This systematically disadvantages anyone not already socialised into academic register: working-class students, first generation students, non-native speakers, those from non-Western educational traditions.

    And here is where the class dimension becomes unavoidable: wealthier students have always had access to human “AI” – private tutors, professional editors, writing coaches. The university’s AI policy effectively punishes working-class students for accessing the free version of what wealth has always bought.

    The defence of this model often claims that “writing and idea development are interconnected.” But this argument privileges a specific type of complexity, the kind that aligns with Western academic traditions. It dismisses other forms of knowledge as lesser. Bob Marley was not a great writer in the academic sense, but he demonstrated through song that he was capable of profound philosophical thought. No-one listens to Redemption Song and thinks it would be better as a peer-reviewed journal article.

    The university’s insistence that writing and thinking are inseparable is not a pedagogical truth, it is epistemological imperialism that has mistaken the technology of one culture for universal human cognition.

    Disobedience

    The old world is dying and the new world struggles to be born. In this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear. – Antonio Gramsci

    What I am proposing (an idea-centric model that assesses intellectual substance separately from its expression in academic register) is not just an alternative assessment strategy. It is an act of epistemic disobedience.

    Universities are preparing students for a world that no longer exists. They treat the achievement of “academic register” as a core learning outcome, the very “polish” that proves the “diamond” is real. Meanwhile, the journals students aspire to publish in are saying “we care about the diamond – you can use a machine to help with the polish.”

    University AI policy, with all its confusions and contradictions, is a morbid symptom of this crisis. It is the institution desperately trying to maintain its gatekeeping function while the professional world it claims to prepare students for has already moved on.

    The journals have accidentally revealed that the emperor has no clothes: academic register was always about exclusion, not excellence.

    Universities must now choose. They can admit that “polish” was always just gatekeeping and redesign pedagogy around the substance of thought. Or they can maintain the fiction and continue punishing students (disproportionately working-class, non-native, and non-Western students) for seeing through it.

    As the old world of easily policed, surface-level assessments dies, we must embrace the struggle of the new. For this new world to be born, we must stop gatekeeping altogether – and start building gateways.

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  • What does authentic assessment mean in the context of AI?

    What does authentic assessment mean in the context of AI?

    In recent discussions about assessment in higher education, responses to generative AI have converged on a familiar solution: authentic assessment.

    The term is typically used to describe assessment tasks that resemble real-world or professional practice. In principle, such tasks are intended to reduce opportunities for misconduct and strengthen the relevance of learning.

    This instinct is sound. Assessment that connects meaningfully to the contexts in which knowledge will be applied has genuine pedagogical value. But authenticity alone is not enough. Without accountability, authentic assessment risks becoming a reassuring label rather than a meaningful guarantee of learning.

    In the context of AI, authentic assessment is often positioned as a safeguard. The underlying assumption is that sufficiently contextualised, complex, or experiential tasks will be resistant to automation, thereby preserving academic integrity. There is something to this. Well-designed authentic tasks can create conditions in which understanding matters more than output.

    The difficulty is that authenticity, treated as a sufficient condition for integrity, rests on increasingly fragile foundations.

    In the real world

    Authentic assessment assumes that the “real world” serves as a stable reference point. Assessments are designed to simulate professional practice on the premise that such practice represents the authentic endpoint of education. Yet across professions, AI tools are already embedded in routine work. Lawyers draft contracts with AI assistance. Journalists use AI for ideation, drafting, and editing. Software developers rely on AI-generated code. In many domains, working without AI is no longer representative of professional practice. If authenticity is defined as mirroring real-world conditions, then authentic assessment must necessarily accommodate AI use, which means authenticity alone cannot do the work of verifying understanding.

    This is where the concept risks becoming what some have dubbed a “thought-terminating cliché”, not because authentic assessment is without value, but because invoking authenticity as though it resolves the challenge of AI can obscure the deeper question: how do we know that a student understands what they have produced? An authentic task sets the right conditions. But we need to go further.

    There is also a deeper structural issue. Historically, many assessments appeared “authentic” not because unaided cognitive work was inherently valued, but because effective shortcuts were unavailable or easily detected. Authenticity was often a by-product of constraint rather than a deliberate pedagogical principle. As those constraints erode, authenticity needs a companion principle, one that addresses what authenticity, by itself, cannot – the relationship between the student and the work.

    From authenticity to accountability

    Rather than abandoning authenticity, I propose that we complement it with accountability. Where authenticity shapes the nature of the task, grounding it in meaningful, real-world contexts, accountability addresses the nature of the evidence. An accountable assessment focuses on the extent to which students can substantiate, explain, and take responsibility for what they produce, regardless of whether AI tools were involved.

    Under this framework, the central question is not whether work was produced unaided, but whether the student can demonstrate understanding that extends beyond the submitted artefact. Authenticity asks, does this task reflect how knowledge is actually used? Accountability asks, can this student show they understand what they’ve done and why?

    Together, these two principles form a more complete basis for assessment in an AI-rich environment. Authentic tasks without accountability can produce polished outputs that mask shallow understanding. Accountable assessment without authenticity risks becoming a series of interrogations detached from meaningful practice. Both are needed.

    First the assessment needs to be defensible. The student can justify decisions, explain reasoning, and take responsibility for the outcomes of their work. Second, it needs to be traceable. The student can demonstrate how their thinking developed over time, including revisions, abandoned approaches, and the role of tools such as AI. And third, it needs to be answerable. The student can respond to challenge, questioning, or critique from educators, peers, or practitioners, showing that understanding is not confined to a polished final product.

    Together, these criteria shift attention from the artefact itself to the student’s relationship with it. They do not diminish the importance of authentic task design, instead they give it sharper purpose. An authentic task becomes the context within which accountability is demonstrated.

    What this looks like in practice

    Adopting an assessment that is both authentic and accountable has significant implications for design. For example, an oral defence (or viva) of written work, where students submit a written assignment and subsequently respond to questions that probe their reasoning, choices, and understanding, combines an authentic written task with an accountable demonstration of learning.

    Assessment could also require students to document their learning processes, submitting drafts, notes, revision histories, design decisions, and, where relevant, records of AI interaction. The learning trajectory becomes assessable, not only the final submission. The task remains authentic and the process becomes accountable.

    An interactive approach to assessment and feedback would distribute assessment across a course, allowing educators to engage with students’ thinking over time. Familiarity with a student’s reasoning reduces reliance on single high-stakes judgments and builds a richer picture of understanding within authentic disciplinary contexts.

    Students could also be required to apply concepts in real time through problem-solving, demonstrations, simulations, or teaching others. Understanding is evidenced through action and explanation rather than solely through submitted artefacts, making it authentic in form and accountable in substance.

    Weathering the change

    These approaches are not immune to challenge. They demand time, interaction, and sustained engagement, and they sit uneasily within systems optimised for scale, anonymity, and efficiency.

    Assessment that is both authentic and accountable cannot be implemented through anonymous submission and blind marking alone. It requires relational engagement between students and assessors. This has clear resource implications and raises questions about workload, equity, and institutional capacity.

    Yet these constraints also clarify the stakes. If institutions wish to make meaningful claims about student understanding in an AI-rich environment, they must confront the limitations of assessment systems designed for a different technological era.

    The emergence of generative AI does not merely challenge existing assessment practices, it exposes longstanding assumptions about authenticity, authorship, and integrity. Authenticity remains a valuable principle, it grounds assessment in the contexts where knowledge matters. But it was never designed to carry the full weight of verifying understanding, and in an era of generative AI, that weight has become unsustainable.

    Accountability makes explicit what authenticity alone cannot guarantee: that assessment is ultimately a human judgment about learning, not a mechanical verification of process compliance. By pairing authentic task design with the principles of defensibility, traceability, and answerability, institutions can build assessment frameworks that acknowledge the reality of AI use while preserving the core educational aim of assessing understanding and knowledge creation.

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  • Why research communications needs more politics

    Why research communications needs more politics

    It can’t be easy managing UKRI’s communications.

    The nation’s research funder has an almost endless amount of things it could talk about on any given day. A new research project over here, a new international partnership over there, a new piece of guidance, a bit of spotlighting something good a university has been up to, a bit of apologising for something that has gone wrong, it is an almost endless list of topics trying to reach an almost endlessly big audience thirsty for funding, advice, and a little bit of insight.

    The recent news about funding challenges at STFC have not been wonderfully communicated but this isn’t entirely UKRI’s fault. Yes, as their Chief Executive Ian Chapman has stated they might have done more to bring people with them on their changes, but ultimately UKRI was forced to respond to news that had leaked and thereby removing their control of the narrative.

    Sometimes organisations communicate things badly and people are rightly upset about it. In the case of UKRI the more interesting story, aside from the policy changes, is what the episode tells us about research communications.

    Politics, policy, process and priorities in that order

    In recent years governments have explicitly lashed their plans for a better economy to the mast of research. Boris Johnson’s get Brexit done manifesto made a virtue of doubling research spending, Rishi Sunak took the UK back into Horizon Europe despite the instincts of his party on Europe, and Keir Starmer has maintained the momentum on record research settlements. Research is not just about breakthroughs and growth it is a deeply political project which comes with a set of choices.

    This political focus means debates about research are about both the quality of new proposals, ideas, and approaches, but they are also about engaging with a political agenda. When former science secretary Michelle Donelan libelled some academics as harbouring extremist sympathies it plainly wasn’t a debate about Research England’s sub-committee but a political project about the “politicisation of the public sector” as the Policy Exchange note that inspired this tirade put it. The debate about REF is both about what can be measured in culture and whether as a political idea research is about individuals or collectives, and to what extent.

    The error that we can often make is to suggest that politics should be kept out of research and instead the aim should be to communicate ideas as clearly as possible. A position of a kind of studied neutrality. This is a nice idea but it can never work. The public, through tax, are ultimately the funders of research and whether they are world leading researchers or casual observers of news they are entitled to an opinion on how their money is spent. This means even if they aren’t subject experts their views on whether too much is spent on research, whether it is spent in the right way, whether it should be spent at home or abroad, on arts or science, in London or elsewhere, or any other number of things, are valid and therefore form part of the wider political discourse. Once the public are in the arena politicians will do things to try and win their votes. The communication challenge is to inform this debate. Avoiding politics is to remove key context on how decisions are made and why.

    Political communications for everyone

    This means that national funders of research need more, not less, political communications. Funders, universities, and everyone involved in research, cannot maintain consent for record funding settlements and big decisions that impact the entire country through explaining the process of research policy making without describing the political project that underpins it. Ian Chapman’s latest letter, House of Commons appearance, and follow up press conference, have been a good example of explaining the project is to grow the economy, the mechanism is the three buckets, the fallout will be that some people will miss out on funding, the upside is it means more focus. The order has to be selling the idea, then the process, and then the consequences.

    The second big implication of the era of political research communications is that ownership of the narrative is much harder and much more important. In a less politically contested world it is easier to delineate between issues that impact researchers, issues that the public care about, and briefings to send politicians. As we’ve seen in something like the debate on REF the pressure for policy change is a mix of outside observers, academics in the system, hints from politicians that it’s quite expensive, and Research England’s own commissioned work. As actors become more diffuse and the debate widens message discipline on core issues, considerations, and owning the terms of the debate, becomes more important.

    All policy making is inherently political and the aim isn’t, or should not be, to narrow the range of acceptable views on an issue but to build a public consensus on what is and is not worth listening to.

    A new dawn has broken, has it not?

    For better or worse this era also means a much more personal approach. The big changes made by the likes of UKRI require institutions to then explain it to their teams who then have limited ability to influence the direction of research policy more generally. In a world where information is everywhere all the time at once trust is increasingly reliant on individual relationships as a means of furthering policy projects. It is not enough to tell people the idea but for people to trust that you are working in their best interests.

    There are echoes here for institutions. Increasingly, the sector feels fraught, information is diffuse, and change is more necessary and feels harder. The lesson is that good communication is not only about explaining what is happening but why it is happening, the consequences, and the trade offs, delivered by people that others can engage with.

    It has been a difficult week for research but it won’t be the only one. This is the moment that the scale of change came to the fore and the difficulties of communicating it. It is also the moment, whether through misfortune or design, the benefits of a bolder approach to research communications became visible.

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