The 2004 Higher Education Act introduced variable tuition fees of up to £3,000 for full‐time undergraduates in England. Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) charging the maximum tuition must give low‐income students bursaries of £300. On top of this mandatory minimum, HEIs now provide additional discretionary financial support exceeding this level to these and other students. The degree to which these new bursaries and discretionary financial support have become a policy instrument for improving access and widening participation has not, as yet, been documented. Little is known about why the government introduced bursaries and what the government saw as their role. Even less is known about the type of bursaries HEIs have introduced or how t...
This paper presents a summary of findings from a five-year longitudinal study of a cohort of full-ti...
Fees will become an increasingly important funding source for public universities in the UK and thro...
This paper explores how English universities operating in a ‘quasi-market’ are managing the tension ...
English universities currently spend £355m each year on bursaries to student groups who are under-re...
Variable tuition fees and bursaries, funded by higher education institutions, were introduced in Eng...
After the abolition of student maintenance grants in 2016, higher education bursaries will be the ma...
There is a growing body of evidence to support the notion that that English higher education institu...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
This article critically analyses the impact of reforms to the student financial support system in En...
Universities and Further Education Colleges in England wanting to charge higher tuition fees (fees a...
For the last 10 years, universities in England have been expected to offer financial support to low-...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
Institutional grants, or bursaries, now are a central feature of the student financial aid systems i...
This document summarises the key findings of the first major national study of bursaries and schol...
This paper presents a summary of findings from a five-year longitudinal study of a cohort of full-ti...
Fees will become an increasingly important funding source for public universities in the UK and thro...
This paper explores how English universities operating in a ‘quasi-market’ are managing the tension ...
English universities currently spend £355m each year on bursaries to student groups who are under-re...
Variable tuition fees and bursaries, funded by higher education institutions, were introduced in Eng...
After the abolition of student maintenance grants in 2016, higher education bursaries will be the ma...
There is a growing body of evidence to support the notion that that English higher education institu...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
This article critically analyses the impact of reforms to the student financial support system in En...
Universities and Further Education Colleges in England wanting to charge higher tuition fees (fees a...
For the last 10 years, universities in England have been expected to offer financial support to low-...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
Institutional grants, or bursaries, now are a central feature of the student financial aid systems i...
This document summarises the key findings of the first major national study of bursaries and schol...
This paper presents a summary of findings from a five-year longitudinal study of a cohort of full-ti...
Fees will become an increasingly important funding source for public universities in the UK and thro...
This paper explores how English universities operating in a ‘quasi-market’ are managing the tension ...