Friday, May 2, 2025
Blog Page 1742

A student guide to Christmas shopping

We all know how it is: during this penny-pinching Recession, the festive season is always the worst. Especially for us students. Having scraped through 8th week on the last of our student loan (that is, if we haven’t already had to raid The Parental Bank) the last thing we need is to have to find the cash to buy probably unappreciated presents for the beloved family. Yes, the fully stocked fridge is a perk of going home for Christmas, but after our claims of ‘I’m only going to spend 80 euros all week on Varsity’ proved entirely unrealistic, we think its optimistic that we’ll be able to fund our Christmas socializing, never mind Christmas shopping. But don’t panic, we’re here to help: here are our top tips for Christmas shopping on a shoestring.

An excellent way to save money at Christmas time is to go down the route followed by all primary school children: make it yourself. A handmade present is literally impossible to criticise, whether or not it’s a work of art/useful/eye-wateringly bad. Hand-made pencil organisers or other such almost useful ornaments are a great angle to take. For the full effect why not make a photo frame and fill it with photos from childhood. The sentimentality that this will inspire makes it impossible for any family member to remember that the person who made this is at university, and should actually be able to stretch to a photo frame that hasn’t been made from a cereal box.

In this era of digital music that comes at a pretty low price, that is if you even pay for music, the mixtape is king. A selection of songs that you already own to fit your particular target, the coolest songs on your iPod for the girl you’re trying to impress, a selection of songs from The X Factor for the parents, Steps’ greatest hits for someone who has wronged you in the past, burnt onto a cd that you’ve stolen from the study. To make it look like you’ve really gone the extra mile, print out a cover and tracklisting and stick it onto a case. It’s not even as if making the thing is an issue: there’s no more carefully preparing a cassette. Just drag and drop the playlist from iTunes.

Charity shops are an excellent way of making your money appear as though it has gone further than it actually has. It’s also good for making yourself look that little bit alternative. Just go to a charity shop and look for what looks the most current/the most retro/the most wearable/the most hideous thing possible. People have different aims when they go to charity shops. And if they don’t like it, you were doing it for the orphans anyway.

One word: regifting. This is probably the best way of ensuring that you don’t have to spend any money, and that the person in question might actually get something they want. With a few minor precautions, this route can be foolproof. Firstly, don’t give the present back to the person who gave it to you. Obvious, yes, but still important. Secondly, check the present for a personal dedication: there is almost no way of talking your way out of it when cousin Jonny gets a book ‘To Nick, Christmas 2009, love Grandpa’. If this works for you this year, then it’s worth making a note of the presents with potential for next year’s regifting. After all, being prepared is half the battle.

This next idea involves some serious considerations, as it could quite easily come across that you’re either too lazy or too cheap to go to the effort of finding an actual present. This, of course, is true, but it’s key that you maintain the illusion of genuinely thinking the person in question would prefer a ‘voucher’ for something rather than a material good. By ‘voucher’, we mean something along the lines of ‘three night’s babysitting’ or ‘I’ll clean your room for a week’.

If worst comes to worst, there’s always theft. We don’t mean for you to take up a life of crime, and start stealing from shops, or strangers for that matter. But we’ve found that if you look hard enough around the house there’ll always be something that has either been forgotten about, or was never wanted in the first place which you can legitimately give to an unsuspecting relative. If said item has lain unused for long enough, it might even be possible to give it back to its original owner. Bold, we know, but worth it for the banter even if it does go wrong.

A final way of securing a cheap Christmas present is to give something that you already want, making it practically free as a present. This can be done with varying degrees of subtlety: either go for something such as a DVD that you’ve wanted to watch, or just go all out and get your balding father a pair of GHDs. Key to this present idea is making sure you can get some use of the gift, otherwise it may backfire significantly leaving you unable to get your chance to play Call of Duty as it’s never out of your grandparents hands.

Obituary: ‘trailblazing’ biologist Lynn Margulis

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The scientific luminary Lynn Margulis, an outspoken pioneer in evolutionary biology, died on 24th November, in Amherst, Massachusetts, aged 73. Renowned for a radical theory of the origin of complex cells, her death marks the loss of a unique and contrarian voice in biology, and the closing of a vibrant and spirited life.

I was fortunate to meet Prof. Margulis in Oxford last year, in an impromptu and surprising encounter. “Is that… the Lynn Margulis,” a friend had said, peering incredulously at a seminar listings noticeboard, “Why has nobody told us about this?” Ten minutes of frantic sprinting later, we slipped into a seminar room on South Parks Road. The audience numbered roughly six.

“You’re here for Lynn?” somebody asked warmly, and then added, “We’ll have to wait a second or two. We know she’s here somewhere, but the thing about Lynn is she keeps you guessing.”

Lynn Margulis has had people guessing for decades. Her provocative hypotheses – generated at almost improbable rates – have engrossed and outraged the scientific establishment for forty years. She brought to evolutionary biology the expansive, daringly playful imagination of a poet or playwright, unafraid to dream up eccentric and spirited plots for a cast of outlandish characters, and ask nature, puckishly, if it had had similar thoughts. It is a testament to her scientific intuition that some of the time it had.

Margulian endosymbiosis, as it is known, remains one of the most beguilingly wonderful ideas in modern science, and its eponymous discoverer deserves a place amongst the pantheon of scientific pioneers. At the cellular level, eukaryotic life – essentially everything besides bacteria and viruses – has long entranced biologists: in all its sublime complexity, the eukaryotic cell has an aura of extraordinary mystique. It shimmers with a bewitching intricacy, an elaborate biomolecular marionette fashioned by aeons of evolutionary ingenuity. Margulis’s astonishing vision lay in seeing that this integrated whole, the quintessence of biological cohesion, had its origins in disparate, independent, elemental entities, joined in a marriage of convenience somewhere in the meandering backwaters of deep time. In essence, a bacterium found itself inside a larger cell, and, remarkably, stayed for posterity. Its descendants are within us all today; indeed, they part of us. We are, in a spectacular sense, part bacterial.

Audaciously resuscitating an obscure and maligned tradition stretching back to the 1880s, Margulis’s insight was a virtuoso and rebellious move, but also – it was felt at the time – an outrageous affront to biological sanity. Across the subsequent decades, she acquired a contrarian reputation, and came to see herself as a dissident voice in a science contaminated by ideological convictions. She was apt to dismiss canonical neo-Darwinian results as crude, capitalist misreadings of evolutionary history; for her, biology’s ongoing love-affair with microeconomics was a disturbing and unsustainable fling, dangerously one-dimensional and inevitably destined to self-combust.

Her instinctive aversion to the Machiavellian mood of modern biology, then, grew from a sense that cooperation in nature was a ubiquitous and powerful driver of innovation, and she did not shy from offering broad cultural diagnoses for her colleagues’ obstinacy: their commitment to monophyly (having a single ancestor) was nothing more than the latent misfiring of monotheistic and monarchical inclinations, and the resistance to accepting symbiosis as a driving force for evolutionary novelty grew from a fear of its “female” connotations. The world as she saw it cannot be meaningfully fragmented, and she warmed naturally and famously to Lovelock’s Gaia hypothesis: the Earth is a vast and indissoluble community, immune to the atomising tendency of “feudal” science.

Margulis was admitted to the University of Chicago aged 14, after a difficult childhood under insensitive parents. Two years later, she fell in love with Carl Sagan, whom she married before the age of 20. She found in biology a quiet, contemplative, aesthetic privacy, seeing “solitude” as vital for the scientific worker. She divorced twice, later remarking that, when juggling marriage, science, and her children, “something has to go”. Despite her famed anti-establishment views, her awards and positions were legion, and included the coveted Darwin-Wallace Medal and America’s National Medal of Science.

Looking back, there was a certain pregnant poignancy about that little lecture room on that quiet summer afternoon. Margulis’s shameless enthusiasm, her insatiable curiosity – “I hear you have very good algae in Oxford; when can I go searching?” – as well as her passion for the smallest of animals, now strike a painful note. With her distinctive, faintly gravelled voice, she spoke earnestly and excitedly about her future projects, and, in the brief conversation we were lucky to have afterwards, she chatted with an affable, effervescent energy that inspired us all.

Charles Darwin once remarked that anyone “who dares to waste one hour of time has not discovered the value of life”. Lynn Margulis was an astonishing and visionary figure, with an insatiable appetite for knowledge. I believe – and I don’t think I’m alone – that Darwin and her would have got on like a house on fire.

She is survived by her four children.

 

 

EuroCRAs(h)

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Like naughty schoolchildren put on report, 15 of the 17 eurozone countries responded with tears and tantrums to Standard & Poor’s decision to place them on a negative “creditwatch” earlier this month. Threatened with the downgrade of their sovereign debt, some politicians resorted to denial – “a wild exaggeration and also unfair” inveighed Jean-Claude Junker, prime minister of Luxembourg. Others muttered accusations of Anglo-Saxon bias – “American rating agencies and fund managers are working against the eurozone” claimed Rainer Bruderle of Germany’s FDP. Christian Noyer, head of the Bank of France, argued last weekend that on the basis of economic fundamentals, “They should begin by downgrading the United Kingdom which has bigger deficits, more debt, higher inflation, less growth than us and where credit is shrinking”. If I go down, I’m taking you with me. And the furore looks set to continue, since Fitch announced last Friday that it too would be putting six European countries on the naughty step of negative watch.

However, the hullabaloo in Europe’s political playground has not been reflected in financial markets. In the wake of S&P’s news, eurozone government bond yields (the interest paid to creditors) hardly increased at all and actually fell in Italy and Spain. Commentators largely rushed to defend credit rating agencies from the protestations of European officials. S&P et al. didn’t reveal anything that investors didn’t already know, hence the markets’ limited reaction. Indeed, the sharp fall in value of many European bonds, such as those of Italy and France, is just one indication that the EU’s structural weaknesses have been evident for months. The role of credit rating agencies is merely to improve the flow of information about the creditworthiness of governments. What’s more, they’re actually good at this. Yes, their performance on US mortgages was spectacularly poor. But they have consistently downgraded sovereign debt a year before each government default since 1975. ‘Why shoot the messenger?’ therefore seems a legitimate retort to huffy politicians calling for the credit rating industry to be regulated and even silenced.

The trouble is, the ratings put forward by agencies do much more than merely state an opinion. If S&P followed through with its threat of downgrading eurozone debt, it would have a real impact on the region’s economy. First, it could spell doom for Europe’s €440bn bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). If any of the six triple A- rated eurozone countries that guarantee the rescue fund are downgraded, the EFSF will also lose its top credit rating, greatly reducing its ability to assist indebted countries. A French downgrade, for example, would drain the pot of €158bn of French guarantees. Taking into account the ongoing commitments to Greece, Ireland and Portugal, this would leave around €150bn, nowhere near enough cash to deal with the increasing strains on Italy and Spain.

Then there are the banks. Sovereign downgrades usually result in a subsequent downgrade of the banking system. This is because they compound economic strains, increase the cost of bank debts and, most importantly, reduce the value of sovereign bonds, which typically comprise 10% of a bank’s balance sheet. These additional problems are the last thing European banks need at a time when they are desperately trying to strengthen their capital bases and restore confidence among shareholders. The risk of default from the two largest eurozone banks is already the highest it has been since the 2008 financial crisis. A downgrade may tip the banking system over the edge.

But its not just Europe’s economy that is vulnerable to credit rating agencies’ decisions. Controversially, agencies seem to have power over politics as well. Despite the claim by S&P’s director of European ratings that the agency is “not in the business of policy making, that’s the business of elected officials”, S&P seems both conscious of its political influence and determined to maximize it. It can be no coincidence that its announcement that 15 eurozone countries could stand to lose their ratings came mere days before a European Union summit that intended to construct a solution to the eurozone crisis. This tactic was also seen in the summer when S&P threatened to downgrade US bonds in the middle of Congress’s negotiations over the debt ceiling. Moreover, the report that accompanied the agency’s warning was full of policy recommendations, including “a greater pooling of fiscal resources and obligations” and “mutual budgetary oversight”. The fact that the agency tied its ratings decision to the outcome of the summit lends credence to the view that it was trying to force politicians’ hands.

Yet, the answer is not to jump to over-regulation of agencies. The European Commission thankfully shelved its idea to ban changes to sovereign credit ratings of countries facing “exceptional circumstances”. Not only would this do little to reassure markets if a country were entering a crisis, it would impinge on agencies’ freedom of speech. Instead, credit ratings should be taken out of regulations, such as central bank collateral requirements and rules that limit which securities certain investors are allowed to hold. This would prevent the repercussions of a rating change being so widespread throughout the financial system. Steps have been taken in this direction. The Dodd-Frank reforms in the US require that regulators replace all references to credit ratings with “other standards of creditworthiness”. Yet much more needs to be done, particularly by policy-makers in Europe, if reliance on ratings is to be reduced.

Finally, the credit rating agencies also need to exercise the influence they yield more responsibly.   Announcing the potential of a downgrade to what were previously considered some of the safest assets around was one thing. Doing so at a time when investors were already nervously awaiting the outcome of the most important European summit this year was unnecessarily inflammatory. It is true that in the event the markets stayed calm. But S&P’s actions could well have sparked a panic. If this had led, for example, to the collapse of a European bank, politicians’ accusations that agencies were deliberately destabilizing the currency union would have rung true. The eurozone is in enough of a mess as it is, without S&P making it worse. Europe should treat the credit rating agencies with respect and vice versa. 

A bitter end to the Northern Rock saga

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Having slashed interest rates to effectively zero percent two years ago, the Bank of England (and other central banks) had lost the use of their trusted weapon of choice. Instead they had to turn to unconventional measures, such as quantitative easing (essentially printing money). Quantitative easing was successful at achieving some of its goals: large firms’ borrowing costs were reduced and share prices and commodities rebounded, pushing up revenues and profits. However, it had no effect on wages. Despite £275 billion being pumped into the economy, the average family continues to face worsening living standards. And so we have the bizarre scenario where taxpayers’ money has been used to increase the wealth of the wealthy by 20%, at a time when the wealth of the country has declined by more than 5%. Incidentally, giving vast sums of taxpayers’ money to the wealthy increased public debt, which the coalition government decided should be tackled by sacking lots of ordinary workers (raising unemployment to record levels), and cutting support to those citizens who need it most. Regardless of the cuts, however, it is safe to say that the benefits of quantitative easing were not evenly felt. Ironically (or tragically), the segments of society that did benefit were the ones who caused the financial crisis in the first place.

In order to avoid a full-blown depression, it was necessary to both bail out the banks and engage in quantitative easing. However, both actions were implemented badly. We, the people, bought huge stakes (sometimes 100%) in failed banks, paying over the odds by most estimates. However, despite providing them with cash (at great expense to ourselves), the banks we own (as well as the ones we don’t) failed to increase lending. And so Adam Posen, a member of the Monetary Policy Committee responsible for conducting quantitative easing, has called for the creation of a state bank that will lend to small and medium sized businesses in need of cash, and therefore help fight the recession. Even George Osborne tacitly acknowledges the need for a state bank by getting his civil servants, untrained in banking, to underwrite business loans with taxpayers’ money (a policy he describes as ‘credit easing’).

This government seems to be either unable or unwilling to join the dots together: 1) businesses are in need of cash to keep the economy going, because banks aren’t lending to them. 2) As a result, policy makers are calling for a state bank with enough money to make loans to those businesses that need it. 3) We own several banks, and have provided the banking sector with £275 billion.

Would it not make sense to use that £275 billion, drummed up at the taxpayer’s expense, to lend, via the banks that we own, to the businesses that need the cash flow to keep people employed and so help us weather the recession? This would help to solve several of the problems facing the UK economy – in particular the lack of lending and the unequal effects of quantitative easing – which have squeezed the 90% of the population already struggling, whilst making the wealthiest even wealthier.

What happened instead? Well, the ‘good’ part of Northern Rock, which was and is profitable, was sold for a £400m loss for no apparent reason. In fact, the loss to the taxpayer was even more than the headline £400m, as £250m of the £747m being paid for Northern Rock comes from Northern Rock’s own capital, which is effectively (you guessed it) taxpayers’ money. Market conditions could not have been worse for the sale, the timing of which is nothing short of mind-boggling, with no other explanation than spectacular short-termism on the part of the coalition. Kept in public ownership, Northern Rock would have continued to make a profit to pay the taxpayer back for its bailout. Meanwhile, Northern Rock could have been the people’s bank, with extra loan-making capacity made available from past or future rounds of quantitative easing to make specifically targeted loans to Small and Medium-size businesses and the population as a whole, minimizing the impact of the recession on both. When market conditions returned to normal, Northern Rock (with its expanded balance sheet and bolstered assets) could have been sold at a profit rather than a huge loss, repaying the taxpayer for its bailout. The proceeds of the sale could have stimulated the economy further via tax cuts or government investment. Instead an opportunity was not only wasted, but butchered – with £650m of taxpayers’ money handed to the buyers of Northern Rock: a combination of Richard Branson, an astronomically rich US speculator, and Abu Dhabi. To say the public is being short-changed would be an understatement – we’re being robbed. 

Mo Farah for Sports Personality of the Year

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Back in August, we watched as Mohammed ‘Mo’ Farah narrowly missed out on becoming the first British world champion over 10,000m. With just one lap to go, Farah looked like he was set to take gold. However, despite running a 53 second final lap, his lead was slowly eroded until he was heart wrenchingly overtaken by Ethiopia’s Jeilan just meters from the finish line.

A week later, however, Mo was back on the track, this time in the 5,000m. Once again, Mo still leads at the front with 400m to go. However, whereas last time he ‘kicks’ early, perhaps too early, this time Farah executes his race perfectly and, holding off the formidable 1500m pace of USA’s Bernard Lagat, takes gold. In doing so, Mo Farah had achieved more than any other British distance runner before him. This 5,000m world title was the crowning glory of a 2011 which also saw Farah win at the European Indoor Championships and the New York City half marathon and shatter the UK 10,000m record.

The clichéd maxim of the sprinter is that any race longer than 400m is just ‘jogging’ — a title that understandably irks those endurance athletes who see sprinters as lazy, posy and in need of a good long run to toughen them up. While he might run 10,000 meters, Farah is certainly no jogger. In fact, if most of the sprinters at last year’s athletics Varsity match had joined Mo for a 10,000m race when he was 9,600m down and only 400m to go, few would be able to keep up with him.  

And that is arguably why Farah’s achievements mean so much more than the other sportsmen in this year’s shortlist. Everyone knows who the fastest kid in school is – everyone runs. If you’re the best at tennis or golf, however, who knows if the other kids wouldn’t beat you if they also had the chance to give it a go? Mo Farah was probably the best runner in his school (no mean feat in high-altitude Djibouti where the Mogadishu-born Farah was raised until the age of 8). Now he is the best in the world. Not to take too much away from the incredible prowess of other sportsmen in this year’s shortlist, but surely the ubiquity, purity and simplicity of running makes knocking balls into holes or back and forth across a net seem rather contrived in comparison and Farah even more deserving of the SPotY title.

But what about other successful British athletes? After a world championship 400m hurdles gold, Greene is rightly up for SPotY nomination and, although both missing out on gold, Phillips Idowu and Jess Ennis have enjoyed the same level of success as Mo. However, Farah has a sparkle and determination about him that, for me, sets him apart from an exceptional crop of British athletes and, if he achieves gold in London, will put him among the legends of British athletics.

According to the bookies, at 14/1, Farah has a tangible, if still an outside chance at taking the SPotY title, a title he would undoubtedly be delighted to put alongside his European athlete of the year award. However, I doubt he will win. With the London Olympics so close, 2011 was, for Farah, about setting himself up for 2012 when his fate will truly be decided. Hopefully the best of Mo Farah is still to come. The nation expects.  

Darren Clarke for Sports Personality of the Year

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Darren Clarke is a popular man. On the circuit and in the sporting press he never wants for admirers. Indeed, from the frequency of references to pints of Guinness, cigars and to how good a bloke he is you’d think this year’s Open had been won by Richard Harris. But as true as all the bonhomie rings, and as satisfying as it is to see a successful sportsperson with a genuinely admirable and likeable character, sometimes this focus can obscure his talent.

He is not merely a very good golfer ‘for a nice guy’; he’s a very good golfer full stop. Anyone who watched him at the K Club in 2006 besting some of America’s finest (he went up against Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Jim Furyk) as Europe won that year’s Ryder Cup, won’t need to be reminded of that. For over twenty years, though, he’d failed to win a major championship, thus falling short of the bar golf demands its greats clear.

That all changed in a windy corner of Kent in July. Clarke handled the gale-buffeted Royal St. George’s links course, once described by the New York Times as a ‘shot-repelling green trampoline’ and a ‘ball-eating machine’, better than heavily-touted compatriot Rory McIlroy, better than Hall-of-Famer Phil Mickelson, better, indeed, than anybody. He played phenomenally, at an age when most players’ eyes and hunger have both started to fail them. It was an arresting win, especially when you consider that only a few years before he’d had an eminently understandable career slump following the awful death of his wife, culminating in a 143rd place finish on the Order of Merit.

Darren Clarke for SPotY, then. I can think of no one else who better fulfils the main criterion: one ‘whose actions have most captured the public’s imagination’. For a damn good piece of sport, for the peak of a storied career, and because, oh go on then, who will celebrate better?

Mark Cavendish for Sports Personality of the Year

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So, this year’s Sports Personality of the Year extravaganza is only an hour away, and neatly side-stepping the already-discussed lack of female representation on the shortlist, let’s look at the people we can vote for. We have a now ex-World Champion boxer, two men who have been at or near the tops of their respective sports without managing to win a major, two golfers who have won majors but will inevitably split the Northern Irish vote, two athletes whose best chance of winning will hopefully come in 12 months’ time following Olympic success and two cricketers, extravagantly successful as part of a team effort (and the England Test team should indeed win Team of the Year). Some notable achievers indeed, and in a year with the paucity of 2006 (Zara Phillips?) there would be a few worthy winners, but unfortunately next to them all stands Mark Cavendish, and that’s where the argument should end.

The Manx Missile’s year could barely make better reading. Multiple stage wins at two Grand Tours? Check. He became the first British rider ever to win the Green (Sprinters) Jersey at the Tour de France. And then he went and won the World Road Race title in October, the first Britain for 46 years.

These achievements are enough, but it is also the manner of his victories, and his relentless consistency, that is astounding. Erik Zabel, renowned as one of the most highly rated sprinters of all time and winner of six Green Jerseys, won ‘a mere’ 12 stages in his 13 Tours. Cavendish currently sits on 20 spread over only four years of competition, already sixth on the all-time list and on course to eclipse the mythical number of 34 won by Eddy Merckx, the greatest of all. In a bunch sprint, previously thought of as a slight lottery with any team’s sprinter in with a chance, it is now almost a case of seeing when Cavendish will rocket out of the bunch, and then fighting over second place. When he was beaten in a sprint, on stage 10 of this year’s Tour by Andre Greipel, it was seen as a shock. And then he came back and won the day after anyway. Subsequently becoming the first man to ever win the final rush down the Champs-Élysées almost seems like an afterthought, such is the level of performance he produces day-in day-out.

His performance in winning the World Road Race championship illustrates this yet further. Team GB arrived with the plan of forcing the pace, eliminating all breakaways and setting ‘Cav’ up for a final 100 metre sprint. They made no secret of this, every other nation knew what was coming and had the opportunity to put a stop to it. The result speaks for itself.

There are yet more reasons. He is a sportsman with an actual personality, never afraid to say what he thinks or show how he feels, evidenced by his tears during the 2010 Tour following a fantastic effort by his team whom he’d previously felt he’d let down. He is always first to mention his team after a race, never failing to thank them for all the efforts to put him in the position from which he can keep on winning. And (whisper it) he looks a good bet to win Britain’s first gold next summer on a course which looks tailor made for him.

On the continent he is worshipped, one French commentator saying ‘how can a country as ignorant as Britain produce a genius like Cavendish?’ It is high time the nation recognised this, and voted him Sports Personality of the Year.

Highest black student intake for ten years

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Thirty-two black students were accepted for undergraduate study at Oxford this year, the highest number in ten years.

The acceptance rate of black students also increased to 14%, an improvement on both 2009 and 2010 figures (12.2% and 8.8% respectively). Black students accounted for 1.3% of all offers made in 2011, the same percentage as those students achieving AAA at A level who are of black ethnicity. A spokesperson for Oxford University promised that Oxford would “continue to do more to improve these numbers.”

White students still have a considerably higher acceptance rate at just over 24%, and such discrepancies led to David Cameron labelling the situation “disgraceful” in April of this year. The University explained that a lower success rate for black students was attributable to a number of factors, adding, “The latest national attainment figures show that of the 36,000 UK students getting AAA or better at A-level, only 452 were black. White students are still nearly three times more likely to get AAA at A-level than black students. School attainment is the biggest barrier to getting more BME [Black or minority ethnic] school students to Oxford.”

Black students’ choice of course was also said to have contributed to lower acceptance rates. A spokesperson explained that, “Black students still apply disproportionately for the most competitive subjects at Oxford, contributing to lower than average success rates.” Oxford’s three most competitive courses (E&M, Medicine and Maths) account for 44% of all black applicants, compared to 17% of all white applicants.

While conceding that they are not “as ethnically diverse as some universities,” Oxford insisted they “want talented black students to know they are welcome,” and stressed their commitment to “widening access to Oxford from under-represented groups.” A spokesperson also refuted criticisms that the UK’s top universities were “failing to attract minority ethnic students,” adding, “Of those (the 452 black students who achieved AAA at A-level), 221 applied to Oxford, and a similar number again applied to Cambridge. In other words, the overwhelming majority of straight-A black students are making Oxford or Cambridge applications.”

Hannah Cusworth, the OUSU Vice President and Access and Academic Affairs Officer, explained that whilst the figures do not “concretely show anything,” she found them “heartening,” adding, “they perhaps suggest that the attainment of black British students is improving.” She explained she was “shocked” to discover that only 452 black students achieved AAA at A-level according to the most recent statistics, and acknowledged that “attainment is a serious barrier to more black students winning places at Oxford and so schools have got to work harder.” When asked what Oxford could do to increase its intake of black students, Cusworth stressed the need for Oxford to “continue to refine its outreach work” and to “take [the issue of] supporting students after they receive their offers more seriously.”

Chidi Onyeche, the BME Officer for the Student Union, explained that although the statistics were “positive,” Oxford “still has a long way to go before we can celebrate any true achievement.” She criticised Oxford’s approach in “discouraging perceptions” of it as a “white middle class institution” as “misguided and limited.” In particular, Onyeche condemned the “Target Schools Initiative”, which sees a number of black and ethnic minority students coming to Oxford for a day, as it takes place “when the children are too young” and is “never followed up again.”

She also argued that, “Oxford seems focused on the success of the school visits but the way that they measure such success once again is misguided,” adding, “Success is not based on the number of people that apply after the school visits take place but how much closer we come to dismantling the perceptions and myths that surround this university.”

Oxford’s African Society also welcomed the increase in the acceptance rate for black students, yet highlighted the contrast in success rates for white students. In a statement, they called for the university to “educate prospective black candidates about subscription rates for various disciplines, so that they are able to make informed decisions in the application process.”

They argued that black students are “under-represented by a factor of 30” at Oxford, and also called for Oxford to make courses more “financially affordable” to black families by “setting up bursaries or offering partial fee waivers.’

They also highlighted a recent report by the NUS which showed that “1 in 3 black students feels that their perspective as black students is marginalised and disregarded in their higher education,” and called for the university to “encourage black students to apply by openly tackling institutionalised and individual acts of racism on campus.

Issah Abdul-Moomin, a first year PPE student, explained that, “increased diversity would be a great thing for Oxford,” yet acknowledged that, “looking at the statistics, it comes as no surprise that there are so few of us.” He said that this was something he had “anticipated” and which has “not been a huge problem,”. He concluded that, “the lack of diversity at Oxford is a problem that needs to be tackled at secondary school level by encouraging aspiration and improving attainment, rather than expecting the University to admit second rate applicants in order to tick boxes.”

Such views were shared by second year PPE student Nadia Odunayo, who argued that “There is definitely a problem with the intake of black students, but this exists not with the university being discriminatory, but with state schools not preparing the students to a competitive standard. If Oxford wants to remain one of the top universities in the world, they have to keep admitting the best students, regardless of background.”

Universities widen entrance criteria

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A new report from admissions experts suggests almost two-thirds of universities will include information surrounding students’ social class, parental education or school performance in selection criteria next year, to ensure the most disadvantaged candidates have a better chance of getting on to degree courses.

The figures follow a warning from the Government’s Office for Fair Access (OFFA) that universities must be more “ambitious” in their efforts to “broaden their entrant pool” if they are to charge higher fees. Whilst it has previously been sufficient for institutions to generate more applications from disadvantaged students, for the first time next year they will be forced to set targets for the number of underprivileged undergraduates being admitted.

A sharp rise on the number of universities currently employing “contextual” information during admissions, increasing institutions are planning to make lower-grade offers to those from poor-performing comprehensives or fast-track deprived candidates into interviews.

The latest study, from the organisation Supporting Professionalism in Admissions, found that just over 40% of universities and colleges used contextual data to admit students last year, but noted that following the rise in tuition fees almost 63% “plan to use it in the future” to ensure poorer applicants are not deterred.

The survey suggested that Russell Group universities, including Oxford, were “more likely to be using contextual data” than other institutions. Earlier this year, it was discovered that only one-in-seven Oxford students are eligible for a full state grant.

However Oxford has denied that there will be any significant alterations to their admissions procedure. A spokesperson for the university’s admissions and education policy stated, “Oxford has in fact already been using a contextual data flagging system for the past three years, and will not be expanding or increasing its use of contextual data beyond the system already in place’

“While the flagging system has changed slightly this year, the changes only amount to a slight shift in the number of flagging mechanisms. Oxford will continue to use a contextual flagging system to identify additional candidates to be invited for interview only. This information plays no part in deciding which candidates get an offer, or what that offer is, and there are no plans to change or extend the contextual data flagging system to encompass the offer-making process.’

Timothy Hands, Master of Oxford’s Magdalen College School, supported the university’s decision, noting that the existing admission process “is wonderful”. He told Cherwell, “Anyone in an independent school is fully in favour of making decisions on potential not just on prior attainment. The care given to admissions by Oxford and Cambridge is absolutely excellent, and it results in a holistic assessment of the individual.”

Hannah Cusworth, Access and Academic Affairs Officer for OUSU, also praised the existing system, as “Oxford doesn’t just base its selection criteria on prior academic performance, many admission’s tutors focus much more on the academic potential of students they interview.”

First-year Leanora Volpe too emphasised the importance of interviewing disadvantaged students, commenting “That’s what the interview is there for – to give an applicant a chance to show their potential and interest separate from their academic performance.”

Clare Joyce, a University undergraduate, called the interview “the cornerstone of Oxford admissions”, but elaborated that “there is still more work to be done.” She felt that the university should also be “encouraging tutors when deliberating between candidates after the interview to consider educational and socioeconomic background.”

The Oxford University Conservative Association, supported Oxford’s decision as “admission should remain on merit”. Miles Coates, President of the society, told Cherwell: “A system that discriminated against candidates on the basis of their school would be unfair.”

However, Thomas Adams, co-chair elect of the Oxford University Labour Club, had more concerns. While he acknowledged the Government’s move to encourage more consideration of contextual date as “a step in the right direction”, he protested: “This entire situation is not helped by the ridiculous trebling of tuition fees which only puts off people from disadvantaged background from applying to university.”

Nathan Akehurst, a first-year at Lincoln College, too suggested that the targets are “too little and too late”, commenting “We exist in a climate of course cuts, diminishing participation, job losses, and increasing marketisation of our educational institutions, and this is the real issue that needs addressing.”

Oriel’s honours

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Oriel College has honoured one of its alumni by flying the flag of Gibraltar above the college.
Fabian Picardo, who studied Law at Oriel from 1990 to 1993, has been elected as the Chief Minister of Gibraltar, an achievement that has been commemorated by his former college. 
The flag was flown after Mr. Picardo’s democratic election as Chief Minister, and did not act as an endorsement of the candidate pre-election. Third year Orielense Mike Gale said he thought it was a “nice gesture” which “personalised and drew [Oriel’s] attention to an otherwise obscure news story.” He added that “remembering alumni is pretty standard at Oriel.”
Colleges have previously honoured the achievements of foreign alumni in the same way: University College flew the American stars and stripes when Bill Clinton was elected as President. 

Oriel College has honoured one of its alumni by flying the flag of Gibraltar above the college.

Fabian Picardo, who studied Law at Oriel from 1990 to 1993, has been elected as the Chief Minister of Gibraltar, an achievement that has been commemorated by his former college. 

The flag was flown after Mr. Picardo’s democratic election as Chief Minister, and did not act as an endorsement of the candidate pre-election. Third year Orielense Mike Gale said he thought it was a “nice gesture” which “personalised and drew [Oriel’s] attention to an otherwise obscure news story.” He added that “remembering alumni is pretty standard at Oriel.”

Colleges have previously honoured the achievements of foreign alumni in the same way: University College flew the American stars and stripes when Bill Clinton was elected as President. 

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