A huge rise in universityapplications from poorer parts of Scotlandhas been revealed by new figures.
After the cancellation of Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) exams last year and the eventual decision to rely on teachers’ professional judgement in deciding students’ grades, the new figures are being seen by many as compelling evidence for why the qualifications system needs a radical overhaul.
So what did the new annual statistics from university admissions body show us?
52,190The rise in applications to Scottish universities.
504,740The number of applicationsmade to Scottish institutions before the January deadline, up from 452,550 last year.
15%The increase in applications from students from the most deprived backgrounds.
A year ago:University deprived background targets are nearly met
Priestley review of SQA results fiasco: 17 key findings
Also this week:Scotland ‘not giving up on rejoining Erasmus scheme’
40%The drop in applications from European Union students (theEU studentsstarting this autumnwould be the first cohort not to be given free tuition).
27%The rise in applications fromoutside the EU.
Grades ‘should be based on teacher judgement’
, the Scottish Greens’ education spokesperson, tweetedabout the Ucas figures: “Amazing what happens when working-class young people are graded based on the professional judgement of their teachers, rather than an SQA algorithm assigning grades by postcode or an exams system designed to entrench inequality.”