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Student Funding at Oxford and Beyond Cat Murdoch – Student Recruitment Officer. Outline. 2012 and beyond funding changes Oxford’s proposed student funding package What do employers look for? Careers in Physics. Financial Support at Oxford.
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Student Funding at Oxford and BeyondCat Murdoch – Student Recruitment Officer
Outline • 2012 and beyond funding changes • Oxford’s proposed student funding package • What do employers look for? • Careers in Physics
Financial Support at Oxford • No student should be deterred from applying to Oxford because of financial considerations. • No student should have to leave because of financial difficulty. • Oxford has amongst the lowest drop-out rates in the country.
Costs and Sources of Funds C O S T S Tuition Charges & Living Costs FUNDING Tuition Charge Loan (Repayable) Student Loan For Maintenance (Repayable) Maintenance Grant (Non-Repayable) University Funding (Non-Repayable)
Government Policy on HE Funding Prior to 2012 Post 2012
Universities Response • 2/3 of Universities have proposed to charge the full amount • 15/16 Russell Group Universities have proposed the full amount • Only 7% of institutions will charge less than £8,000
2012-13 Proposals – Tuition Charges Maximum annual tuition charges to a typical undergraduate degree 2012 entry Current knowledge (in advance of 5 May elections in Scotland, Wales and NI)
Repayment of Government Loans • 9% of earnings over £21,000 threshold • Salary £21,000 - £41,000: Tapered rate of interest, maximum will be Retail Price Index (RPI) plus 3% • Salary £41,000 or more :interest rate of RPI plus 3% • Written off after 30 years • Payment holiday • Early repayment arrangements being considered
Oxford’s Financial Plans for 2012 entry The principles behind Oxford’s proposal for £9,000 tuition charge for 2012 entry are: • To maintain our profile of international excellence • A strong commitment that finance should be no barrier to the best and brightest applying to Oxford • Students will continue to receive an unsurpassed education whose real cost is subsidised by the collegiate University by thousands of pounds a year • Oxford provides outstanding value for money in Higher Education in terms of our tutorial teaching, colleges, world leading academics and outstanding facilities
Oxford’s proposed 2012 tuition charge * Household income is defined as a household’s gross income less pension schemes and superannuation payments eligible for tax relief; less an allowance of £1,130 for each financially dependent child; less £1,130 for parents who are also students.
Living Costs at Oxford • University owned accommodation • College scholarships, prizes and awards • Subsidised food and entertainment in College • Availability of course materials • Cheap transport
The Graduate Market in 2011 • Graduate vacancies are set to rise by almost 10% in 2011 • Employers in key industries and employment areas expect to recruit more graduates in 2011. • Importance of work experience. • The five universities most-often targeted by Britain’s top graduate employers in 2010-2011 are: • Cambridge • Oxford • Warwick • Manchester • London
What are employers looking for? • In a survey of 200 Graduate employers conducted by Prospects.ac.uk these were the top 10 skills/attributes they were looking for: • Verbal communication skills • Enthusiasm • Written communication skills • Work experience • Degree classification • Problem solving skills • Personal/ transferrable skills • Team working • Numeracy • Business awareness
Benefits • A degree from a top University provides highly marketable transferrable skills. • The ‘graduate earnings premium’ from a top university is £80k above the average • Oxford average starting salary = £25,000 (up to £40,000 for some professions) • 20% of Oxford undergraduate leavers earn more than £30,000 per year within six months of graduating (compared to 10% of UK leavers overall).
Careers advisers Fairs and recruitment events Workshops and talks Websiteincl. job & work experience vacancies Work experience programmes Resource Centre Support Benefits
Careers in Physics “I think that physicists can do pretty much anything. Our training can be applied to almost any activity, and it allows us to see things in ways that might not be obvious to others” Simon Singh, science writer and broadcaster.
Using your subject directly • In academic institutions • In research institutes or agency/government laboratories • In large industries • In small companies
Using your subject indirectly • Science consulting and market research • Science policy • Science administration • Science communication • Science publishing • Technology transfer • Intellectual property and patents • Manufacturing • Technical sales and marketing
Moving away from science • Many transferable skillsincluding: • Problem solving skills • Analytical skills • Time management skills • Numerical ability • IT skills • Communication skills • Drive, determination and perseverance • Attention to detail
www.physics.org www.prospects.ac.uk www.brightrecruits.com / www.iop.org www.newscientistjobs.com www.jobsinscience.com/ Websites Institute of Physics