[1] The original consultation can be found here: Consultation on the Report on Widening Access – Scottish Funding Council
| Item | Area[2] | Summary of feedback and changes to be implemented |
|---|---|---|
| B | Publishing the background tables as a Power BI dashboard | We received strong positive support for introducing a dashboard. Users noted it would make the data much easier to navigate and interrogate to meet different needs. Users also noted it would reduce table duplication while aligning with publication standards in the sector. However, users emphasised the need to download the underlying data or background tables. Thus, users suggested adopting a ‘phased transition’ with both Excel and Power BI options available.
A Power BI dashboard will be developed and added to the 2024-25 publication in late 2026 to early 2027. SFC will publish the background tables as normal for the 2024-25 Report. From 2025-26, SFC will continue publishing Excel background tables if we cannot provide data download functionality through the dashboard. See the section Important update on the upcoming 2024-25 publication above. |
| H | Removal of HESA PI Table 2023-24 | We received unanimous agreement that this table can be removed. Feedback confirmed that this table is no longer necessary since the associated HESA benchmark is no longer published.
This table will be removed from the 2024-25 background tables. |
| I | Removal of Background Table 12 (HESA Staff data) | We received widespread agreement that this table can be removed. Respondents noted that university staffing data is now more widely available from the HESA website and that staffing data is tangential to the RoWA’s core student focus.
This table will be removed from the 2024-25 background tables. |
[2] An outline of the original proposed changes can be found in the consultation under the heading ‘What changes are we seeking feedback on?’: Consultation on the Report on Widening Access – Scottish Funding Council
| Item | Area[3] | Summary of feedback and changes to be implemented |
|---|---|---|
| A | Removing articulation reporting from the RoWA and publishing this separately as part of a new ‘student journeys’ publication | Responses were mixed but on balance were supportive. Respondents were supportive if moving articulation reporting would allow the RoWA to be published earlier. Many supportive comments said articulation is currently not explored in enough detail. A dedicated publication could give it more focus, space to explore the data and provide contextual narrative. Those not in favour of moving articulation reporting argued it could weaken the overall picture by separating access, progression and pathways. Several comments framed articulation as central to widening access in Scotland, particularly for recognising the role of colleges, and argued removing it from RoWA risks diminishing articulation’s perceived importance.
SFC plans to publish articulation data in the 2024-25 RoWA this year as normal. SFC will continue developing the student journeys publication for launch and consider this feedback when deciding whether articulation reporting is moved entirely into the student journeys publication or whether it should continue to be published in the RoWA, once the scope of the student journey publication is more closely defined. |
| C | Expanding university student data | We received strongly positive support to expand university population coverage beyond Scottish-domiciled full-time first-degree entrants (FTFD) and Scottish-domiciled undergraduate entrants (SDUE) to include more reporting on Scottish-domiciled entrants to all undergraduate courses. This would include students on access courses, upskilling courses, Graduate Certificates and others, of which tend to be delivered part-time.[4]
The dashboard will allow for a non-filtered setting whereby all levels of undergraduate qualification are included. |
| D | More reporting on part-time university students | We received strong positive support to include more reporting on part-time students at university and to add a new Scottish-domiciled part-time first degree (PTFD) measure. The consultation also posed the question of whether the inclusion of The Open University in Scotland (OUiS) should be able to be toggled as included or excluded in PTFD since the vast majority of PTFD provision is delivered by OUiS.[5] Respondents noted that it would not be equitable to enable readers to isolate only one institution when others are not.
The dashboard will allow for more reporting on part-time university students and a new PTFD measure will be introduced as a selectable population. We will not include a toggle to allow PTFD selection by individual institution but will include a footnote highlighting OUiS deliver a significant proportion of PTFD in the sector. |
| E | Allowing more disaggregation by SIMD decile. | We received strong positive support to include more disaggregation by SIMD decile.[6] Users highlight SIMD0-20 quintile should remain the focus as per the Commission on Widening Access (CoWA) targets, but that decile adds further depth and nuance that can better reflect local recruitment patterns and variation within deprivation. One respondent said they were not supportive but did not offer any comments as to why.
The dashboard will allow for SIMD breakdowns by decile. |
| F | College reporting to be expanded to include students on courses less than 160 hours in duration. | This received the most mixed response of all proposals. Users in favour noted it would remove ‘blind spots’ in reporting by providing recognition of short courses often used as a stepping stone for those returning to education and undertaking adult learning, and who are often from more deprived areas. Respondents caveated that filtering to include these students should be optional and not necessarily ‘on’ by default. Users also advised a minimum threshold to exclude very short training. Others pointed out short courses are often aimed at professional upskilling and therefore may not relate directly to widening access to education.
The dashboard will allow for college students on courses less than 160 hours in duration to be included but only when explicitly set by the user. SFC will look at including incremental duration filters within the under 160 hours group to allow users to filter out shorter courses. Additional footnotes or explanation for these types of very short courses may be necessary. |
| G | More reporting on other widening access groups (estranged, service leavers, etc.) | This received very strong positive support. Respondents welcomed the RoWA reflecting a wider set of learners facing distinct barriers. Institutions are increasingly engaging with and supporting these groups, but they are not consistently visible in reporting.
SFC will look to include breakdowns for other widening access indicators, for example estranged students, veterans (service leavers), carers, refugees/asylum seekers and British Sign Language users. |
| Item | Area[7] | Summary of feedback and changes to be implemented |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Limiting tables and charts to a 10-year time series (excluding CoWA tables) | We received strong positive support. Those in favour noted 10 years is a ‘standard’ review horizon and helps improve comparability due to fewer methodological changes over time. Users viewed the exception for CoWA tables as logical. There was a single respondent disagreeing, noting that they often need to report further back than 10 years. However older publications will still be accessible on the website for those seeking to review historic years.
SFC will adopt a 10-year time series for tables and visualisations. CoWA tables will be excepted from this. |
| 2 | Allowing additional disaggregation by undergraduate qualification type[8] | All respondents were interested in adding this functionality. Better visibility of Graduate Apprenticeships and other work-based routes were noted as a particularly welcome addition to widening access reporting. Respondents also noted it would give a more ‘whole system’ picture of tertiary education and how they interact with widening access measures, such as SIMD0-20.
SFC will introduce disaggregation by qualification type. |
| 3 | Including reporting on degree classification outcome (first, upper-second class, etc.) | This received more mixed feedback. Stakeholders noted that not all programmes have degree classifications, such as medicine and non-honours routes. It was also noted that care would need to be taken to control for factors which influence classification outcomes, such as mode of study and the higher and lower presence of widening access students in different subjects.
SFC will continue to explore the feasibility of including reporting on degree classification outcome. |
| 4 | Including reporting on student remoteness and rurality as two separate entities | This received strong interest overall, with some uncertainty about definitions and purpose. There is a widespread view that SIMD does not fully capture rural barriers. Users noted rurality and remoteness is a meaningful lens for access and participation. Its inclusion would add balance to widening access discussions that are often SIMD-centric. Stakeholders stressed that establishing the right definitions is critical, with suggestions to use the Scottish Urban-Rural Classification.
SFC will continue to explore the options available for reporting on rurality and remoteness. |
[3] An outline of the original proposed changes can be found in the consultation under the heading ‘What changes are we seeking feedback on?’: Consultation on the Report on Widening Access – Scottish Funding Council
[4] See Annex A in the consultation for an overview of the qualification types included in each population metric: Consultation on the Report on Widening Access – Scottish Funding Council
[5] See Annex B in the consultation for a breakdown of how Scottish-domiciled part-time first-degree entrants are spread across institutions: Consultation on the Report on Widening Access – Scottish Funding Council
[6] Most breakdowns only include SIMD quintile.
[7] These other possible measures we solicited feedback on were listed under the heading ‘Feedback on other possible measures’ in the consultation: Consultation on the Report on Widening Access – Scottish Funding Council
[8] Such as integrated masters, first degree with honours, Graduate Apprenticeship, HNC, etc. Not limited to university qualifications.
[9] See ‘A Blueprint for Fairness: Final Report of the Commission on Widening Access’: https://www.gov.scot/publications/blueprint-fairness-final-report-commission-widening-access/
[10] Articulating students entering directly into year 2 or 3 are captured in this data. This is because the retention metric captures those entering the first academic session and retained into their second academic session, regardless of what year of programme that might be. Students entering their first session and qualifying before the second are also counted in retention metrics.
| Institution type | Institution name | Responding in an individual capacity or representing the views of a specific organisation |
|---|---|---|
| University | Abertay University | Individual |
| Edinburgh Napier University | Organisation | |
| Glasgow Caledonian University | Organisation | |
| Glasgow School of Art | Organisation | |
| Heriot-Watt University | Organisation | |
| Robert Gordon University | Organisation | |
| The Open University in Scotland | Organisation | |
| University of Aberdeen | Organisation | |
| University of Edinburgh | Organisation | |
| Oilthigh Ghlaschu | Organisation | |
| University of St Andrews | Organisation | |
| University of Stirling | Individual | |
| University of Stirling | Organisation | |
| University of the West of Scotland | Organisation | |
| College | Ayrshire College | Individual |
| Ayrshire College | Organisation | |
| Borders College | Organisation | |
| Edinburgh College | Organisation | |
| Glasgow Kelvin College | Organisation | |
| North East Scotland College | Organisation | |
| South Lanarkshire College | Organisation | |
| West Lothian College | Organisation | |
| Specialist | Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC) | Organisation |
| Other organisations | Colleges Scotland | Organisation |
| HUB for SUCCESS | Organisation | |
| Scotland’s Community of Access and Participation Practitioners (SCAPP) | Individual | |
| Scottish Government | Organisation | |
| Skills Development Scotland | Organisation | |
| Scottish Parliament Information Centre (SPICe) | Organisation | |
| SFC Internal | Student Interests, Access and Quality Team | Individual |
SFC Strategic Plan 2022-27
Building a connected, agile, sustainable tertiary education and research system for Scotland.