Metadata
Title
Summary of Access and Participation Plan 2024–25 to 2027–28
Category
general
UUID
734b9b2546494739b7f31f2f3d198dfa
Source URL
https://www.leeds.ac.uk/about/doc/summary-2024-25-2027-28-access-participation-p...
Parent URL
https://www.leeds.ac.uk/about/doc/access-participation-plan
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T15:00:49+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Summary of Access and Participation Plan 2024–25 to 2027–28

Source: https://www.leeds.ac.uk/about/doc/summary-2024-25-2027-28-access-participation-plan Parent: https://www.leeds.ac.uk/about/doc/access-participation-plan

Access and participation plans set out how higher education providers will improve equality of opportunity for underrepresented groups to access, succeed in and progress from higher education.

This page is a summary. Please refer to the full plan for more details: Access and Participation Plan 2024-25 to 2027-28 (Download DOCX 111.41 KB).

Key points

Our Plan outlines the ways we are working to improve students’ outcomes here at Leeds. We know that outcomes are lower for some of these groups:

Fees we charge

Fees for UK undergraduate students are decided by the Government and may vary if policy changes. The fee may increase in future years of your course in line with inflation, and as permitted by law.

Find out about tuition fees for our undergraduate students.

Financial support

Our Leeds Bursary offers full and part-time students a choice of a fee discount, cash payment or contribution towards accommodation worth up to £2000 a year.

We have also introduced a £2000 per year premium for students from Care Experienced /Estranged backgrounds, and a £500 per year award to new students at the £36,000–£42,600 household income threshold to help mitigate costs of living. Full information can be found at Leeds Bursary.

Means-tested scholarships are available to groups who are either less likely to go onto higher education or more likely to have lower outcomes. These are worth £3000 per year. Full details, including selection and eligibility criteria, can be found at Scholarships: personal circumstances.

Information for students

We are committed to making our information as accessible as possible.

Information we provide to students:

Communication methods:

Our Access and Participation Plan will be available on our student finance webpages, approved and reviewed through committees which have student representation.

All our information regarding financial support adheres to the Competition and Markets Authority's advice to ensure that we comply with consumer law.

What we are aiming to achieve

We have identified several key risks to equality of opportunity:

We aim to:

  1. increase the percentage of mature students attending the University to 7.1% by 2027/28
  2. increase the percentage of students from Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) Quintile 1 attending the University to 16.1% by 2027/28
  3. eliminate the continuation gap between IMD Quintile 5 and IMD Quintile 1 students reducing to 4 percentage points (pp) by 2027/28
  4. eliminate the continuation gap between Black and White students reducing to 3.3 pp by 2027/28
  5. eliminate the continuation gap between mature and young students, reducing to 4.3 pp by 2027/28
  6. eliminate the completion gap between IMD Quintile 5 and IMD Quintile 1 students reducing to 4.4 pp by 2027/28.
  7. eliminate the completion gap between Black and White students, reducing to 3.4 pp by 2027/28
  8. eliminate the degree awarding gap between IMD Quintile 5 and IMD Quintile 1 students to 11.9 pp by 2027/28
  9. eliminate the degree awarding gap between Black and White students, reducing to 11.6 pp by 2027/28
  10. eliminate the degree awarding gap between mature and young students, reducing to 8 pp by 2027/28.

What we are doing to address keys risks to equality of opportunity

Our approach to addressing the key risks includes several activities designed to target specific groups including, but not limited to, mature students, students from minoritised groups and students from high deprivation areas.

Access

We will address the access risks by developing our mature student outreach, our flexible course provision, Information, advice, and guidance strategy (IAG) use of our alternative entry scheme, and our mature student marketing strategy; attainment raising in schools, targeted outreach activity, and associated admissions strategy.

Continuation and completion

Continuation relates to students progressing from year 1 and into year 2 of their studies and completion is when students complete their course. We will address the risks here through the delivery of schemes such as the Plus Programme (which works with under-represented groups) which includes enhanced welcome, induction and transition work implementation and development of learner analytics system supporting direct interventions from staff; identification of more ‘early warning’ systems flagging students at risk of leaving and triggering interventions; financial support (including some positive action scholarships); more emphasis on success related objectives through governance and budgetary structures, student voice and teaching enhancement; more coordinated work directing best practice for promoting mature student success.

Degree awarding

We will address this risk through the implementation of more inclusive ways of teaching including implementation of our Curriculum Redefined programme and assessment strategy, and specifically work on decolonising the curriculum, implementation and development of learner analytics system and supporting direct interventions from staff; undertaking further research into inclusive teaching and learning, addressing the hidden curriculum of embedded expectations with staff and through student engagement prior to registration and on-course, student voice, closer engagement between faculties (particularly academic personal tutors) and the Lifelong Learning Centre.

How students can get involved

Leeds University Union (LUU) works with the University to ensure students have contributed to the development of our plan. Through LUU students also work in partnership with us to monitor and evaluate its outcomes.

To be involved in this work students can get in touch with us directly using the contact details at the end of this page, or you can get in touch with representatives from LUU.

Additionally, you can contact the Plus Programme team who run the student involvement project which works to ensure students have a meaningful say in the development, delivery, monitoring and evaluation of our fair access and success work.

Evaluation – how we will measure what we have achieved

Our work is informed by the best available evidence we have on what is effective for students. This evidence is gathered through learning from our peers and through evaluation of our own activity. We use data and feedback to understand how effectively our work contributes to the overall aim of improving our students’ access and success.

Our programme evaluations assess:

A consistent approach to evaluation is embedded across teams directly involved in access and success work with groups that are underrepresented in higher education.

We will also be sharing the outcomes of our evaluation and research through planned webpages and at conferences we attend or deliver across the university sector.

Contact details

For more information, please email Louise Banahene, Director of Educational Engagement at L.Banahene@adm.leeds.ac.uk.