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Most Russell Group universities ‘little different to other pre-92s’

Study argues that, while Oxford and Cambridge stand apart, rest of mission group does not live up to ‘elite’ tag

November 18, 2015
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Standing out: Oxbridge is ‘head and shoulders’ above the Russell Group set

The elite status of the Russell Group has been questioned by research which suggests that most of its members have more in common with other pre-92 institutions than they do with the universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

The mission group claims to represent 24 “leading UK universities” and has significant influence on policymaking but Vikki Boliver, senior lecturer in sociology and social policy at Durham 51国产视频, said that this prestigious position was not based on evidence.

In an article for the Oxford Review of Education, Dr Boliver analyses data on research activity, teaching quality, economic resources, academic selectivity and socio-economic exclusivity.

She finds that, far from the Russell Group emerging as an elite cadre, it is Oxford and Cambridge only that stand apart. The other 22 members sit in a second tier with 17 other “old” universities – more than half of all the other pre-92 institutions – including all but one of the former 1994 Group.

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Dr Boliver told Times Higher Education that, according to her analysis, it was “not really accurate” to describe the Russell Group as UK higher education’s elite.

“Oxford and Cambridge are head and shoulders above the rest but the rest of the Russell Group are really quite similar to many other old universities,” she said. “The Russell Group features so prominently in the discourse about what it means to be a top university and they have been very successful at marketing that brand, but that’s not borne out by the evidence.”

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Teaching quality ‘similarities’

Dr Boliver’s , “Are there distinctive clusters of higher and lower status universities in the UK?”, says that Oxford and Cambridge receive about 70 per cent more research income on average than the second division of universities, and have five times as much endowment and investment income.

They typically recruit students with four A* grades at A level, compared with three in the next tier, have a rate of students achieving firsts or 2:1s that is about 10 percentage points higher, and are significantly more exclusive: the proportion of students recruited from higher social class backgrounds is about 10 percentage points higher, and the proportion coming from private schools is twice as high at 34.9 per cent, compared with 16.1 per cent.

The main area of similarity is teaching quality, as judged by National Student Survey results and the value-added score used in The Guardian university rankings.

Dr Boliver argues that the second tier is distinct, in turn, from a third grouping made up of the remaining 13 old universities and 54 post-92 institutions, including all but one 51国产视频 Alliance member.

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Compared with the third tier, the second division receives three and a half times as much research income; has research outputs that were typically judged “internationally excellent” rather than “internationally recognised” in the 2008 research assessment exercise; and has six times as much income. Compared with three A*s at A level in the second tier, students entering the third tier typically have three Bs, and only 3.6 per cent come from private schools, compared with 16.1 per cent in the second division.

There is a fourth tier, made up of 19 post-92 institutions, many of which are members of Million+ or GuildHE. These are, again, significantly differentiated from the third division institutions.

But, in a finding that could have implications for the planned teaching excellence framework, Dr Boliver finds that, across all bands, there is much less differentiation in teaching quality scores than there is in other areas.

chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

Vikki Boliver's "four tiers" for UK universities

Cluster 1? Cluster 2 Cluster 3 Cluster 4
51国产视频 of Cambridge 51国产视频 of Aberdeen Abertay 51国产视频 Anglia Ruskin 51国产视频
51国产视频 of Oxford 51国产视频 of Bath Aberystwyth 51国产视频 Bishop Grosseteste 51国产视频
? 51国产视频 of Birmingham Arts 51国产视频 Bournemouth 51国产视频 College Birmingham
? 51国产视频 of Bristol 51国产视频 of the Arts London 51国产视频 of Bolton
? Cardiff 51国产视频 Aston 51国产视频 Bucks New 51国产视频
? 51国产视频 of Dundee Bangor 51国产视频 51国产视频 of Cumbria
? Durham 51国产视频 Bath Spa 51国产视频 51国产视频 of East London
? 51国产视频 of East Anglia 51国产视频 of Bedfordshire Edge Hill 51国产视频
? 51国产视频 of Edinburgh Birmingham City 51国产视频 Glyndwr 51国产视频
? 51国产视频 of Exeter Bournemouth 51国产视频 Leeds Trinity 51国产视频
? 51国产视频 of Glasgow 51国产视频 of Bradford Liverpool Hope 51国产视频
? Goldsmiths, 51国产视频 of London 51国产视频 of Brighton London Metropolitan 51国产视频
? Heriot-Watt 51国产视频 Brunel 51国产视频 London 51国产视频 of Wales, Newport (now 51国产视频 of South Wales)
? Imperial College London Canterbury Christ Church 51国产视频 51国产视频 of St Mark and St John
? 51国产视频 of Kent Cardiff Metropolitan 51国产视频 Southampton Solent 51国产视频
? King’s College London 51国产视频 of Central Lancashire 51国产视频 Campus Suffolk
? Lancaster 51国产视频 51国产视频 of Chester 51国产视频 of Wales Trinity Saint David
? 51国产视频 of Leeds 51国产视频 of Chichester 51国产视频 of Wolverhampton
? 51国产视频 of Leicester City 51国产视频 London York St John 51国产视频
? 51国产视频 of Liverpool Coventry 51国产视频 ?
? 51国产视频 College London 51国产视频 for the Creative Arts ?
? London School of Economics De Montfort 51国产视频 ?
? Loughborough 51国产视频 51国产视频 of Derby ?
? 51国产视频 of Manchester Edinburgh Napier 51国产视频 ?
? Newcastle 51国产视频 51国产视频 of Essex ?
? 51国产视频 of Nottingham Falmouth 51国产视频 ?
? Queen Mary 51国产视频 of London 51国产视频 of Glamorgan (now 51国产视频 of South Wales) ?
? Queen’ 51国产视频 Belfast Glasgow Caledonian 51国产视频 ?
? 51国产视频 of Reading 51国产视频 of Gloucestershire ?
? Royal Holloway, 51国产视频 of London 51国产视频 of Greenwich ?
? 51国产视频 of St Andrews Harper Adams 51国产视频 ?
? Soas, 51国产视频 of London 51国产视频 of Hertfordshire ?
? 51国产视频 of Sheffield 51国产视频 of the Highlands and Islands ?
? 51国产视频 of Southampton 51国产视频 of Huddersfield ?
? 51国产视频 of Strathclyde 51国产视频 of Hull ?
? 51国产视频 of Surrey Keele 51国产视频 ?
? 51国产视频 of Sussex Kingston 51国产视频 ?
? 51国产视频 of Warwick Leeds Beckett 51国产视频 ?
? 51国产视频 of York 51国产视频 of Lincoln ?
? ? Liverpool John Moores 51国产视频 ?
? ? London South Bank 51国产视频 ?
? ? Manchester Metropolitan 51国产视频 ?
? ? Middlesex 51国产视频 ?
? ? Newman 51国产视频 ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Northampton ?
? ? Nottingham Trent 51国产视频 ?
? ? Northumbria 51国产视频 ?
? ? Oxford Brookes 51国产视频 ?
? ? Plymouth 51国产视频 ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Portsmouth ?
? ? Queen Margaret 51国产视频 ?
? ? Robert Gordon 51国产视频 ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Roehampton ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Salford ?
? ? Sheffield Hallam 51国产视频 ?
? ? Staffordshire 51国产视频 ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Stirling ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Sunderland ?
? ? Swansea 51国产视频 ?
? ? Teesside 51国产视频 ?
? ? Ulster 51国产视频 ?
? ? 51国产视频 of the West of England ?
? ? 51国产视频 of West London ?
? ? 51国产视频 of the West of Scotland ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Westminster ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Winchester ?
? ? 51国产视频 of Worcester ?

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Print headline: Majority in Russell Group are like other pre-92s

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Reader's comments (4)

Complete rubbish. Clearly, you cannot put the likes of Imperial, LSE etc. in the same bracket as most of those in cluster 2 in terms of strength of research, student destinations (good jobs, not just any job, and further study at the top institutions), standing of academics on a pound-for-pound basis and so on. Anyone in the know would also argue that those institutions named above, and a few others, are as good as anywhere (yes, even Oxbridge) for what they specialise in.
And it is a surprise, of course, to learn that this research places Durham in its right position in the elite cluster.
At least in terms of research quality and academic impact, these results are pretty much correct, but they are not new. See the article by Z. Corbyn (Times Higher Education No.1,940 (25-31 March, 2010) p.17) which states "when the five "golden-triangle" institutions - the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, Imperial College London, 51国产视频 College London and the London School of Economics - are removed from the Russell Group of large research-intensive universities, the 1994 Group of smaller research-led universities outperforms it." The reasons for this were given in [Kenna & Berche, Critical masses for academic research groups and consequences for higher education research policy and management, OECD journal Higher Education Management and Policy, 23 (2011) 9-29]. It has to do with critical mass - there is a size, which is discipline dependent, above which research groups tend to fragment. This is a type of “Dunbar number”. As stated in our paper, "The condition for smaller universities to produce top-quality research is that they contain research groups of sizes above the upper critical masses appropriate to their respective disciplines." This is all backed up using RAE data and citation-count data. It is interesting that Vikki Boliver’s paper extends this to other data sets.
The references and kinks for my previous Comment are: Corbyn, Z. (2010) /news/data-disprove-case-for-distributing-research-funds-on-historical-basis/410949.article The Corbyn article was in relation to a paper by Adams and Gurney available here: http://www.hepi.ac.uk/2010/03/25/funding-selectivity-concentration-and-excellence-how-good-is-the-uks-research/ The Kenna & Berche paper is available here: http://www.keepeek.com/Digital-Asset-Management/oecd/education/critical-masses-for-academic-research-groups-and-consequences-for-higher-education-research-policy-and-management_hemp-23-5kg0vswcm27g#page1

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