Authors
Nick Adnett, Colin McCaig, Kim Slack, Tamsin Bowers‐Brown
Publication date
2011/1
Journal
Higher Education Quarterly
Volume
65
Issue
1
Pages
12-33
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
In 2004 the Schwartz Review advised English higher education institutions that their admissions systems should: be transparent; select students who are able to complete their courses based upon achievements and potential; use assessment methods that are reliable and valid; minimise barriers to applicants; be professional; and be underpinned by appropriate institutional structures and processes. These five principles were only expressed as recommendations, reflecting the reluctance of policy makers to interfere with individual higher education institutions' admissions policies. This article analyses the results of research that reviewed the progress that English higher education institutions had made in implementing the Schwartz recommendations and assess whether a more interventionist stance is required to achieve ‘fair admissions’.
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