I have mentioned before that just because of its size, JA is in an in-demand cohort. This has made that even better / worse, depending on whether you are looking for a place or desperately need students...
"Now that the government has announced that exam results are about to appear out of thin air, home undergraduates are about to be the sector’s equivalent of toilet roll in Tescos. Half the sector will grab, and the other half could be in very serious trouble, student numbers wise."
The reminder of the regulator's duty to assess university's financial viability ("no material risk of insolvency within three years") is also interesting, because without the explicit promise of government support, any genuine assessment of that at the moment would lead to dozens of them failing the test = failing to get students = disappearing.
"Now that the government has announced that exam results are about to appear out of thin air, home undergraduates are about to be the sector’s equivalent of toilet roll in Tescos. Half the sector will grab, and the other half could be in very serious trouble, student numbers wise."
The reminder of the regulator's duty to assess university's financial viability ("no material risk of insolvency within three years") is also interesting, because without the explicit promise of government support, any genuine assessment of that at the moment would lead to dozens of them failing the test = failing to get students = disappearing.