HC Deb 26 January 1998 vol 305 cc84-5W
Mr. Willis

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Employment how many grants were awarded by the Humanities Research Board of the British Academy to students to undertake a masters and doctoral higher degree from(a) higher education colleges and (b) universities in the last five years. [23824]

Dr. Howells

The number of awards offered for Masters courses for 1993–97 was as follows:

First degree 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997
Institution
University 557 535 553 474 474
HE College 21 12 17 12 10
Total 578 547 570 486 484

The number of awards offered for Doctoral Study for 1993–97 was as follows:

First degree 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997
Institution
University 527 493 511 467 522
HE College 23 6 7 11 4
Total 550 499 518 478 526

Mr. Willis

To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Employment what policy the Humanities Research Board of the British Academy operates in respect of funding for students wishing to undertake masters and doctoral higher degrees; what proportion of studentships have been allocated to mature students in the last five years; and how many of the studentships were allocated to those who have graduated from colleges of higher education in the last five years. [23823]

Dr. Howells

The Humanities Research Board's (HRB's) policy is to allocate postgraduate awards through an annual competition. It does not allocate quotas of awards to specific institutions, courses, age groups or subjects. Rather, all applications are assessed and graded, and awards made down a list of rank order candidates until available funds are exhausted.

Applications are submitted on students' behalf by the institutions at which they intend to study and are assessed by panels of senior academic staff in the relevant subject areas. Panel members are drawn from universities across the country and serve for a term of three years. In assessing applications, they take account of candidates' performance in examinations at first degree level; candidates' statements about their intended programme of study or research and their reasons for undertaking it; referees' reports and, where appropriate, reports on candidates' performance on postgraduate-level courses; and information provided by institutions about supervision arrangements, and the training and support it will provide. The Board's expectation is that applicants should normally have completed an initial year of postgraduate study before embarking on a three-year programme of doctoral research.

With regard to mature students, the HRB monitors only those applicants who are aged 40 or over at the date of application. The percentage of awards offered to such applicants is shown in the table.

Per cent.
1993 5
1994 3
1995 4
1996 4
1997 5

The number of awards offered for Masters courses to applicants with a first degree from higher education colleges for 1993–97 was:

Year Number from HE Colleges
1993 21
1994 12
1995 17
1996 12
1997 10

The number of awards offered for Doctoral study to applicants with a first degree from higher education colleges for 1993–97 was:

Year Number from HE Colleges
1993 23
1994 6
1995 7
1996 11
1997 4