Access and Participation in English HE: A Fair and Equal Opportunity For All?

This seminar is number two in a five-part public seminar series on ‘Student Access to University’, led by the Department of Education and convened by Jo-Anne Baird (Director, Department of Education) and Simon Marginson (Professor of Higher Education, Department of Education). The series forms part of the department’s 100th Anniversary celebrations, marking 100 years of leading research in education. The series will be held at venues across the University and aims to encourage public discussion and move access forward by bringing a research-based treatment to it.

Chris is the first Director of Fair Access and Participation in England’s Office for Students, which is the independent regulator of higher education. This is a statutory role established by the 2017 Higher Education and Research Act, with responsibility for improving equality of opportunity in relation to access to, success in and progression beyond higher education for students from disadvantaged and under-represented groups. The seminar will identify how universities and government have sought to make progress in this area during the last two decades and the patterns of participation arising from this. In doing so, it will consider the extent to which universities and government have been successful in this area, whether current patterns of participation can be considered to be a fair and equal opportunity for all, and the consequences of this. It will conclude by considering the imperatives for progress into the future and the balance of responsibilities between universities and other organisations, including the regulatory approach to be adopted by the Office for Students.

SEMINAR SPEAKERS
This seminar will be chaired by Martin Williams (Pro-Vice Chancellor (Education), University of Oxford). The speakers will include, Chris Millward (Director of fair Access and Participation, Office for Students) and a response will be given by Simon Marginson (Professor of Education, Department of Education, University of Oxford).