Home > About HEFCE > Introduction > About higher education in England > FAQs about HEFCE and HE
Last updated 10 September 2010
Most of our funding is allocated by formula. Our funding method is described in ‘Guide to funding: How HEFCE allocates its funds’ (HEFCE 2010/24)
The Skills Funding Agency (SFA) is the main funder of FECs. HEFCE funds most higher education courses at FECs. Contact the SFA on 0845 377 5000 or visit the SFA web-site.
For a list of FECs which are directly funded to offer HE courses see our web-site.
Institutions should normally have their own records management policy covering this issue, which looks at the retention of student data for the institution's own business reasons. However, for HEFCE purposes, they should keep student data records for at least three years prior to the current year, except where HEFCE has open queries on any earlier year's data, in which case those years should be retained until the queries are fully resolved.
Some subjects cost more to teach than others: some need laboratories and workshops while others are taught wholly in lecture theatres and seminar rooms. This is reflected in HEFCE's funding method for teaching applied to phase-out funding for old-regime students, in which subjects are classified in four price groups, A-D, according to how much they cost to teach.
|
Price group |
Description |
Cost weight |
|
A |
The clinical stages of medicine and dentistry courses and veterinary science |
4 |
|
B |
Laboratory-based subjects (science, preclinical stages of medicine and dentistry, engineering and technology) |
1.7 |
|
C |
Subjects with a studio, laboratory or fieldwork element |
1.3 |
|
D |
All other subjects |
1 |
For new-regime students the following initial rates of funding apply, for price groups A and B only:
|
Price group |
Initial rate of funding |
|
A |
£9,804 |
|
B |
£1,483 |
Most of our documents are only available on the web. All current HEFCE publications can be downloaded free of charge. A few guides are available in print, and can be ordered from Publications on 0117 931 7116 or by e-mail to publications@hefce.ac.uk.
We offer the following ways to keep up with HEFCE's developments:
Subscription to these e-mail lists is free.
To receive notification of information at the time it is published on our web-site, use one or more of our RSS news feeds.
University league tables are published by several newspapers but they are not produced by HEFCE. These league tables are not official and use a variety of sources for their data. League tables have appeared in The Guardian, Sunday Times, The Times, The Complete University Guide.
You may also find the Unistats web-site of interest: http://unistats.direct.gov.uk/. This web-site has an analysis of the results from the National Student Survey.
HEFCE is responsible for assuring the quality of the HE provision it funds. All quality assurance is carried out on the HEFCE's behalf by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA).
The quality of teaching and the standard of awards in HEIs are assured through the Quality Assurance Framework (QAF). This consists of institutional audits and collaborative provision audits, which assess how the institution manages its own quality assurance processes. The QAF also includes the publication of information about quality and standards in HEIs through the National Student Survey web-site.
For HE that is delivered in FECs, quality assurance is still undertaken at subject level using the academic review method. 2006-07 was the last year in which this took place. The new method of review, Integrated Quality and Enhancement Review (IQER), looks at how the college manages the quality of its provision.
We, in collaboration with the other three UK funding bodies, assess the quality of research through the Research Excellence Framework (REF).
HEFCE cannot provide guidance on this. There is a list of institutions that offer accredited UK degrees on the web-site for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.
You can find out about undergraduate courses from the UCAS web-site or tel 01242 222444 for general enquiries, or e-mail enquiries@ucas.ac.uk
All applications for undergraduate courses are administered by UCAS.
You can find out about postgraduate courses on the Careers Service Unit's web-site. From their home page choose the 'postgrad study' section.
There is no central admissions service for postgraduate courses. You should apply directly to the university or college where the course is offered.
The following organisations provide lists of institutions by region:
Our ‘Regional Profiles’ publication contains information about institutions in the nine English regions.
For general information on teacher training contact: The Training and Development Agency for Schools, 151 Buckingham Palace Road, London, SW1W 9SZ, tel 020 7023 8000, e-mail corporatecomms@tda.gov.uk.
For routes into teaching contact: Teaching Information Line 0845 6000 991.
For details of teacher training courses available see the Graduate Teacher Training Registry web-site.
For information about repayment of student loans for teachers of shortage subjects see the teachernet web-site.
The Institute for Learning is the independent professional body for teachers and trainers in Further Education and Skills.
No. Advice of this sort can be found through The UK Council for International Student Affairs who operate an enquiry line open between 1300 and 1600 Monday to Friday. Their number is: 0207 107 9922.
HEFCE cannot assist with this but The National Academic Recognition Information Centre for the United Kingdom (UK NARIC) can. Contact UK NARIC on 0871 330 7033, e-mail info@naric.org.uk.
UK students wanting to compare their UK qualifications with that of another country should contact the National Information Centre for Academic Recognition and Mobility in that country for more information. UNESCO has a World Directory of National Information Centres for Academic Recognition and Mobility. They can be e-mailed at bpiweb@unesco.org. The following web-sites also give contact details:
HEFCE's primary responsibility is to distribute government funds for teaching and research to universities and higher education colleges in England. We do not become involved in disputes between students or staff and their institutions. We may become involved in issues about whether the funds we allocate to universities and colleges are being properly used.
Each university and college should have its own official internal complaints procedure. Make sure you have been through this procedure before taking further action.
Make sure you have sought advice from internal sources within your institution (your tutor, student welfare office and your student union). Some institutions have a 'Visitor', who is an independent person who can hear appeals if internal procedures have been exhausted. Your local students' union is normally able to assist with complaints or appeals and will have access to legal support through the National Union of Students. To obtain the contact details of your students' union, the NUS can be contacted by e-mail at nusuk@nus.org.uk.
Further information about complaints
The Office of the Independent Adjudicator (OIA) opened on 29 March 2004. It provides an independent scheme for the review of student complaints. Further information on who can bring a complaint, what complaints can be brought and higher education institutions participating in the scheme, can be found on the OIA web-site. The OIA can be contacted at: Third Floor, Kings Reach, 38-50 Kings Road, Reading, RG1 3AA, tel 0118 955 9813, fax 0118 955 9099.
The Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) is the first port of call for most data on students, qualifications and staff in UK higher education.
UCAS also provides online statistical services - under Facts and Figures - Statistical Enquiry Service.
Or our Data & statistics section may have what you need.
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