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Published 11:38 8 Nov 2018 GMT
Updated 11:41 8 Nov 2018 GMT
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According to official admission statistics by the University of Oxford, 16% of black students living in the UK who applied in 2017 were offered a place, compared to 26% of white students.
The Oxford admission statistics page appears to argue that this is due to black students applying for more competitive courses such as law and medicine, stating that: "students from BME backgrounds are more likely to apply for the most competitive courses than White students.”
Whilst I was undergoing my UCAS applications I remember certain students at my grammar school being encouraged to apply for weaker courses - such as Geology - for a greater chance of being accepted.
Maybe black students aren't offered this advice from their schools. Maybe they have more ambition than to scrape into Oxford grades far below their original offer and study Geology (as one student did), simply to forge a career off the back of a 2:2 or third with a prestigious university at the top of degree. Maybe they would simply rather strive to be a doctor or a lawyer.
As FullFact.org points out from their analysis of Oxford's admission statistics, 11% of black law applicants from 2015 to 2017 received an offer, and 6% were admitted.
23% of white applicants received an offer, and 20% were admitted.
For medicine, 9% of black students received an offer and 8% were admitted, compared to 22% and 20% respectively for white students.
[caption id="attachment_207617" align="alignnone" width="825"]
UCAS (figures rounded due to scale)[/caption]
The document strains to point out that the university is, roughly, which is another way of saying behind but not astronomically far off, in line with the national average for Russell Group universities outside of London.
Black students made up 2.8% of undergraduate admissions at non-London Russell Group universities in 2015. At Oxford University in 2015, only 1.5% of admissions were black students.
Again, quite why the official university statistics are exclusively using 'non-London' universities as a basis for comparison, rather than just, you know, universities, is unclear when the same document shows that 24.7% of the university's admissions between 2015 and 2017 were students from Greater London.
This is the largest area from which students are accepted into the university and is almost proportionally double the region's total share of the UK population - which is 12.9%.
When Stormzy announced the scholarship with Cambridge, he said: “If you’re academically brilliant don’t think because you come from a certain community that studying at one of the highest education institutions in the world isn’t possible.”
Clearly, it isn't impossible to study at the University of Oxford if you are a black student. But it does appear difficult.
Why they then wouldn't make it easier for two students, through no cost of their own, is a mystery. Or it isn't.
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