Colleges win right to award foundation degrees

Landmark move allows institutions to take significant step forward in higher education provision
5th August 2011, 1:00am

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Colleges win right to award foundation degrees

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FE colleges will be able to offer their own foundation degrees for the first time in a landmark step towards institutions obtaining full degree-awarding powers.

NCG - formerly known as Newcastle College Group - has been granted foundation degree-awarding powers, following lengthy scrutiny by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA). New College Durham has also been given the green light.

NCG has also applied to be given the power to award its own BA (Hons) and BSc (Hons) qualifications. Its chief executive Dame Jackie Fisher said: “We are delighted to be able to award our own foundation degrees.

“Foundation degree-awarding powers creates a platform for us to forge ahead with our plans for taught degree-awarding powers, and gives us the opportunity to provide students with degrees that will give them the skills to get jobs and progress in their careers.”

NCG, which consists of Newcastle College, West Lancashire College and Sheffield-based Intraining, already claims to be the largest FE provider of HE courses in the country.

There are currently more than 50,000 students taking foundation degrees across NCG, which awards degrees through its partners Leeds Metropolitan, Newcastle and Kingston universities.

The group has set its HE tuition fees at pound;5,800 per year, significantly lower than the pound;9,000 maximum charged by many universities.

The new powers will initially be used to allow NCG to validate the 74 foundation degrees offered at its Newcastle and West Lancashire sites.

At present, many of the 250 colleges in England which offer HE courses are at the mercy of their partner university, which has the power to decide what qualifications they can teach and how many places they can offer.

The QAA’s decision could pave the way for more FE institutions to become awarding bodies themselves.

John Widdowson, principal of New College Durham, said: “We are delighted to have been given foundation degree-awarding powers. Given the changes currently being experienced in HE, we will consider the other options open to us as the situation develops.”

Stephen Jackson, QAA’s director of reviews, said: “After working with Newcastle College and New College Durham and carefully considering the evidence, we were assured about the quality of student experience that each college provides, and their systems and procedures for establishing and maintaining academic standards.”

Bradford College is waiting to find out whether it will be given full degree-awarding powers, while Grimsby Institute and Blackburn College have also applied to offer foundation degrees.

Joy Mercer, Association of Colleges director of education policy, said: “We are heartened by the commitment in the Government’s HE white paper to make the application process for foundation degree-awarding powers more streamlined.”

Original headline: Colleges win right to award their own foundation degrees

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