Higher Education Funding Council for England explained

Agency Name:Higher Education Funding Council for England
Nativename:HEFCE
Formed:1992
Preceding1:Universities Funding Council, Polytechnics and Colleges Funding Council (1988–92)
Dissolved:2018
Superseding:Office for Students (OfS) and United Kingdom Research and Innovation (UKRI)[1]
Jurisdiction:England
Headquarters:Nicholson House, Lime Kiln Close, Stoke Gifford, Bristol, BS34 8SR
Region Code:GB-SGC
Employees:c.260
Budget:£3.5 bn (2016–17)[2]
Minister1 Name:Jo Johnson
Minister1 Pfo:Minister of State for Universities and Science
Chief1 Name:Professor Madeleine Atkins CBE
Chief1 Position:chief executive
Chief2 Name:Sir Tim Melville-Ross
Chief2 Position:Chairman
Agency Type:Non-departmental public body
Parent Agency:Department for Education
Website:www.hefce.ac.uk

The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) was a non-departmental public body in the United Kingdom, which was responsible for the distribution of funding for higher education to universities and further education colleges in England since 1992. It ceased to exist as of 1 April 2018, when its duties were divided between the newly created Office for Students and Research England (operating within United Kingdom Research and Innovation).

Most universities are charities and HEFCE (rather than the Charity Commission for England and Wales) was their principal regulator. HEFCE therefore had the duty to promote compliance with charity law by the universities for which it was responsible.

History

HEFCE was created by the Further and Higher Education Act 1992 (which also created the Further Education Funding Council for England (FEFC), replaced in 2001 by the Learning and Skills Council).

On 1 June 2010 HEFCE became the principal regulator of those higher education institutions in England that are 'exempt charities'. This followed the Charities Act 2006, according to which all charities should be subject to regulation.

The Higher Education and Research Act 2017 directed that HEFCE should be replaced by a new body, the Office for Students, also incorporating the Office for Fair Access (OFFA), but with HEFCE's research funding functions reassigned to UK Research and Innovation.

Chief Executives

Structure

HEFCE staff worked within six directorates. Leadership for these key strategic areas was shared between the Chief Executive and directors.

Management

The chief executive of HEFCE was Professor Madeleine Atkins (since 1 January 2014), previously Vice-Chancellor of the University of Coventry. Her predecessor, Sir Alan Langlands is now the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leeds.

Function

In 2017-18 HEFCE allocated £3.5 billion in public funds [3] from the UK Government to universities and colleges in England to 'invest on behalf of students and the public to promote excellence and innovation in research, teaching and knowledge exchange'.[4] It only funds the institutions and does not give grants or loans to individual students. It also helps develop and implement higher education policy, based on research and consultation.

Charity regulation

HEFCE was the legal 'principal regulator' for the many UK universities and colleges who are classed as exempt charities. HEFCE described its role as 'to promote compliance by charity trustees with their legal obligations in exercising control and management of the administration of the charity'[5] and has a memorandum of understanding with the Charity Commission that details how the two will work together.

Industry-academia links

In addition to distributing both teaching and research funding to higher education institutions HEFCE was also involved with: widening participation; developing links between higher education institutions and business and the community; and enhancing leadership, governance and management within the sector. It provided both a contribution to core funding, and ring-fenced funding for special initiatives, projects and strategic aims.

The Prevent duty

The Government delegated to HEFCE the responsibility for overseeing the Prevent duty, which obliged relevant higher education bodies to have due regard to the need to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism. HEFCE monitored whether these bodies were carrying out the duty effectively, and reports findings back to providers and the Government on a regular basis.[6]

Register of Higher Education Providers

HEFCE administered the Register of Higher Education Providers, a searchable tool that shows how the Government regulates higher education providers in England. This is primarily a regulatory tool, which lists each provider's names and addresses, its powers and the standards it is required to meet, among other information useful to other regulators and Government agencies.[7]

Unistats

HEFCE also owned the Unistats website which includes the student satisfaction ratings for different universities and subjects. These satisfaction ratings are compiled from the National Student Survey, and the feedback from students is held within the Unistats website and allows students to compare subjects, universities and UCAS points, see satisfaction ratings from other students and see what the employment prospects are for graduate jobs by subject chosen.

Teaching initiatives

Higher Education Academy

The Higher Education Academy (HEA), founded in May 2004, is funded by the UK HE Funding Councils (including HEFCE) and institutional subscriptions. It was established as the result of a merger of the Institute for Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (ILTHE), the Learning and Teaching Support Network (LTSN), and the TQEF National Co-ordination Team (NCT).[8]

National Teaching Fellowship Scheme

HEFCE also funded a National Teaching Fellowship (NTF) scheme for those working in England and Northern Ireland. The initiative is administered by the HEA and has two separate strands providing individual awards – recognising individual excellence in teaching within the Higher Education sector – and awards for large-scale projects typically undertaken by Higher Education institutions over periods of up to three years.[9]

Discontinued initiatives

Criticism

The journal Nanotechnology Perceptions expressed doubt about the ability of HEFCE to effectively regulate the universities for which it was responsible, suggesting that while it would have the power to impose financial penalties on universities engaging in dishonest practice, there was no indication that it was prepared to do so.[13]

Location

HEFCE was based in Stoke Gifford to the north of Bristol. OFFA was based on the same site.

See also

External links

Video clips

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Higher Education and Research Bill. gov.uk. Department for Education. 5 July 2017.
  2. Web site: HEFCE Annual report and accounts 2016-17 . 23 November 2017.
  3. Web site: Funding for higher education in England for 2017-18: HEFCE grant letter from the Department for Education. 23 November 2017. HEFCE. 2007. HEFCE.
  4. Web site: About us. 23 November 2017. HEFCE. 2007. HEFCE.
  5. Web site: Regulating higher education institutions as charities. 23 November 2017. HEFCE. 2007. HEFCE.
  6. Web site: Monitoring of the Prevent duty. 23 November 2017. HEFCE. 2007. HEFCE.
  7. Web site: About the Register. 23 November 2017. HEFCE. 2007. HEFCE.
  8. Web site: Higher Education Academy: About us. 3 June 2009. Higher Education Academy. HEA.
  9. Web site: National Teaching Fellowship Scheme. 3 June 2009. Higher Education Academy. HEA. https://web.archive.org/web/20080404130803/http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/ourwork/professional/ntfs. 4 April 2008. dead.
  10. Web site: Centres for Excellence in Teaching and Learning. 1 June 2009. HEFCE. 2007. HEFCE.
  11. Web site: Fund for the Development of Teaching and Learning. 3 June 2009. Higher Education Academy. HEA.
  12. Web site: TLRP: Aims . https://web.archive.org/web/20021014023934/http://www.tlrp.org/aims/index.html . dead . 14 October 2002 . 3 June 2009 . TLRP . TLRP .
  13. Editorial, The corporate responsibility of universities. Nanotechnology Perceptions 8 (2012) 167–170.