The higher education Green Paper was published on 6 November 2015, but what is it, and what does it mean for employees of the sector?
According to the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, the proposals are designed to:
- introduce a Teaching Excellence Framework that will deliver better value for money for students, employers and taxpayers
- increase access and success in higher education participation for those from disadvantaged and under-represented groups
- create a new single gateway for entry and create a create common system for all providers
- establish a new Office for Students to promote the student interest and ensure value for money, and to reduce the regulatory burden on the sector
The consultation also considers the implications of the proposals on the research landscape.
Times Higher Education will be following the development closely. In the meantime, here are some articles that will help you understand what the Green Paper might mean for you.
News and analysis: the higher education Green Paper
Green Paper overview: ‘Office for Students’ and new fee regime proposed
Hefce and Office for Fair Access would be merged into new body under government proposals, while Green Paper also suggests ministers could set fee caps
The higher education Green Paper at a glance
Some of the key points to take away from the government’s consultation document on the future of higher education
The Green Paper and TEF: framework paves way for variable fees
Most institutions likely to be able to increase fees in 2017-18, with subsequent awards to allow for further rises
What the higher education Green Paper means for research
Much is to be decided on who will distribute research funding, but a metrics-based ‘mini-REF’ may raise eyebrows, says David Matthews
More private providers and ‘exit’ plans for universities
John Morgan looks at Green Paper plans to make it quicker for private colleges to access public funding and become universities
Green Paper reaction
See how the sector reacted as the Green Paper proposals were unveiled
Higher education Green Paper: have universities really neglected teaching?
Richard Black on the ‘lazy and self-serving argument’ that research and teaching are in competition
Higher education bill in doubt as nervous Tories consider other options for Green Paper
Absence of legislation would leave plans to create new student and market-focused regulator unable to proceed
A BIS consultation on the proposals is currently open. You can take part here (closes 16 January, 2016).
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to THE’s university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber? Login