TEF should ‘penalise universities for failing on racial equity’

Report flags how seven institutions that have achieved a coveted gold rating have black awarding gaps exceeding 25 percentage points

Published on
February 5, 2026
Last updated
February 5, 2026
Students at a university lecture hall
Source: iStock/skynesher

Several universities in England which have scored a top rating in a national teaching assessment have large gaps in degree outcomes for black students and low representation of black academics, according to a report that says equity goals should form a larger part of quality metrics.

The report by Katharine Hubbard, the director of learning enhancement and academic practice at Buckinghamshire New University, analyses results from the 2023 Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF), a national scheme run by the Office for Students (OfS) that assesses the quality of teaching in English universities.

She found that seven institutions that had a gold rating, the highest in the system, had black awarding gaps exceeding 25 percentage points. This means that black students at these institutions were far less likely than white students to earn a first- or upper-second-class degree, the report, published by the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) points out. 

It also found that more than half of gold- and silver-rated universities recruited significantly fewer black staff than expected based on the UK working-age population. In some cases, students would have completed their degrees without ever encountering a black professor or senior academic staff member.

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“Can an institution really be considered gold standard when it has a black awarding gap of over 25 percentage points and students never encounter a black academic?” Hubbard said.

“If racial inequity is a structural issue, we can only tackle it through changing structures. TEF is the most visible badge of quality in the English higher education sector – it’s time to make racial equity a more substantive part of the metrics that drive institutional behaviours and action.”

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The report argues that racial equity is not considered a “major strategic priority for institutions”, allowing them to “get away with poor performance” on equity while maintaining strong reputational metrics. Progress towards racial equity has been “notoriously slow”, it adds, saying that structural changes are needed to accelerate improvements.

To address disparities, Hubbard suggests a flag-based system to show which universities have significant racial inequities. It would look at eight student outcomes and four measures of staff representation. If a university has a large gap in any of these areas, it would receive a flag and this would impact its TEF rating. 

“If all gold and silver institutions with three or more racial inequity flags were downgraded, around one-in-five providers would see their TEF rating change as a result of racial inequity or under-representation,” it says in the report. 

Nick Hillman, the director of Hepi, said universities had made progress when it came to diversifying their student population, but disparities remained. “[While] some institutions have done more than others, there continues to be a substantial black degree-awarding gap and the number of black professors continues to be very low at many places and across the sector as a whole,” he said. 

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“I doubt everyone will agree with all the recommendations, but our hope is that the paper contributes to a useful debate.”

seher.asaf@timeshighereducation.com 

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Reader's comments (7)

"Progress towards racial equity has been 'notoriously slow', it adds, saying that structural changes are needed to accelerate improvements." 'Structural change' is easy to demand without specifying its nature. Cut the virtue signalling and come up with precise, intelligent, doable strategies that do not compromise educational quality.
Hubbard reports the degree attainment gap between black and non- black students and the low representation of black academics in universities and assumes that the fault of these is entirely due to the individual university. Before coming to this conclusion there needs to be further investigation. For example, is the under representation of black academics due to a bias in the selection process or is it due to a low number applying? If the latter, then this can hardly be blamed on the individual university. There needs to be a much more evidence based approach as to why these disparities exist rather than immediately penalising universities for factors which may be out of their control.
Yes I agree, much of this is the fault of our problematic secondary school system in my view. There is a limit Universities can do in terms of social mobility etc as they arrive later on the educational journey and can not retroengineer the student cohort. I was informed that the most under-represented demograpic in the UK HE system was actually that of white, working class males. Is this true? If so, should it not also be a cause for concern as it is an equality issue? The low representation of black students and the low representation of this other social group should both be flagged up as issues?
The narrative is always the sole responsibility of the HE provider. Are the respective students ever a significant contributor to the situation? Education involves initiative and engagement from the student as well. If an undergraduate does not graduate, it is the university's fault. If an undergraduate does not get a 'good' degree, it is the university's fault. If an undergraduate is dissatisfied as rated in NSS, it is the university's fault. If an undergraduate is not motivated to study, it is the university's fault. If a graduate does not get a job, it is the university's fault. If a young adult is NEET (not in education, employment, or training), it is because there are no jobs. God forbid if students did not make a diligent effort or have a poor attitude towards their education, and expect them to have any form of personal responsibility or accountability.
I imagine there are several reasons for why we do not see more black academics (black and other minority student numbes are in line with demographics to my eye); same reason why many are turning their backs on an academic career - 1) average salaries, with low level increases every year, 2) dearth of tenured positions, 3) too much admin and nonsense (gold, sliver, bronze, but three), 4) an impending tsunami of redundancies and retraction of the research environment. There are better opportunities out there for inquisitive minds than academia.
Yep more crap when will they start monitoring the degree outcome for people who are blind, in wheelchair, ADHD, deaf and other like problems and penalizing universities for their underperformance? Who cares about the silly Gold Silver and Bronze medals - some of the worst Universities have the Gold's and the best the Silvers and Bronzes so the TEF means a big fat zero.
Well said! The voice of honest indignation. When that rubbish TEF came in my international colleagues used to laugh at us, they said the instirutions they knew about as outstanding were all given Bronze or Solver and the places they had never heard of got Gold and were excellent. It is a joke but sadly a very damaging one for the sector. In any case Unversities are not responsible for all the "ills" of society. You cannot expect us to right all the wrongs. The people who decise thiese things are mediocre administrators attempting to give themselves soe sort of faux expertise and power. They are generally inadequates who love to have power over others.

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