Medical schools allocate state school places
In an influential new scheme,
the government is to reserve
places at Guy's, King's and St
Thomas's Medical School exclusively for the use of state school
pupils from deprived areas. The
move follows a recent report
from the Sutton Trust, which
criticised university access for
comprehensive school students
compared with that of independent schools.
From 2001, ringfenced
places at the medical school will
be paid for by the Higher Education Funding Council and will
be offered to students who have
come from educationally or
socially disadvantaged backgrounds. It is unclear whether
these offers will involve lowering the A level entrance grades
traditionally needed to study
medicine at the university.

State educated Laura Spence was refused a place at Oxford (NORTH NEWS AND PICTURES)
Nick Jenkins, chair of the
British Medical Association's
Medical Students Committee,
commented in response to the
scheme, "We support this measure and we would like to see it
introduced in more medical
schools, but it will only work if
backed up with sufficient funding from the government to
ensure that the best potential
doctors from all backgrounds
are able to enter the medical
profession."
The government has recently
criticised university elitism, following the media frenzy over
Laura Spence, a state educated
teenager who was refused a place
to study medicine at Oxford.
Education secretary David Blunkett stated earlier this month
that, "We want far more pupils to
see university, including top universities, as a natural destination
and not a world apart." Addressing the National Association of
Head Teachers' annual conference, Mr Blunkett pledged to
break down the privileges that
come from "having gone to the
right school, or having been
brought up in the right family."
Critics have accused the government of using universities as
scapegoats for its own failure in
higher education. "Here's a government that, at a stroke, abolished maintenance grants and
introduced tuition fees, saying it
wanted to widen access. It is the
height of hypocrisy," said Evan
Harris, higher education
spokesman for the Liberal Democrats.
In a separate move, the
Russell Group of leading
research universities is currently considering new funding proposals to widen
university access. These
include introducing a system
of loans to cover tuition fees of
up to £30 000, based on the
degree chosen and the
parental income of students.
Under the proposals, the loans
would be repaid as a percentage of graduate income at
interest rates 3% above inflation rates¾student loans are
currently repayable at an interest rate that is equal to the rate
of inflation. The tuition fees
paid would go some way
towards funding scholarships
for students otherwise unable
to afford a university education. If implemented, these
plans would move UK universities towards the funding system used by the American ivy
league universities, where a
needs-blind admissions policy
is funded by private donors.
Siān Knight, Nottingham
studentBMJ 2000;08:217-258 July ISSN 0966-6494