A small number of UK universities are offering an early winter intake that will enable international students to avoid the impact of visa changes that will prevent dependants from joining them from January 2024.

While some universities having been offering November starts for a number of years, others have created a new intake specifically for 2023.

Traditionally, the UK opens a ‘second’ postgraduate intake in the month of January to create additional places for applicants on some of the most popular taught courses including business, management or computer science degrees.

This off-track intake has been a powerful enabler of growth in international recruitment, especially for students coming from the Southern Hemisphere or who failed to secure a visa in time for an autumn start.

January 2024 and beyond however, will now be affected by the UK government ruling to prevent applicants from bringing family members with them as dependants.

The University of Law has now introduced a new December intake for some postgraduate courses starting in 2023.

Students will be required to take an additional generic module on academic study skills to bridge the gap to the January intake and the course-specific content.

The UoL website states “students can join this course in December 2023 to benefit from an extra module on academic and professional practice to help prepare you for postgraduate study and enhance professional skills”.

Ravensbourne University London, a specialist in digital media and design which outsourced their international admissions processing to Oxford International Education Group, is another university offering widespread November course starts.

Teesside University’s London campus based in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford also offers a limited number of courses starting in November, although the website chatbot informs prospective international students that they will “need to apply using an agent in your country”.

The University of Bedfordshire has been offering a November intake since 2016 and a website course finder returns 45 postgraduate courses with a November start including masters degrees in law, business, computing, engineering, economics and tourism.

The University of Bedfordshire says there has been no significant change in applicant behaviour in relation to November demand.

In July, The PIE News reported on Nigerian students rushing to secure places before dependants ban, with Jamie Hastings, director of My International Office describing students as ‘scrambling’ to secure places in September.

It remains to be seen if this demand will now shift to the smaller number of November and December start dates being offered in the market.

Flexibility on course start dates is seen as an attractive proposition for international students and is being increasingly adopted by modern institutions.

Private universities such as BPP and UA92 operate rolling-admissions systems that allows students to join every few months.

According to HESA data, BPP featured as the third biggest recruiter from markets associated with a higher number of dependants connected to student visas. In 2021/22, the university recruited 5,400 students from across Nigeria, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

In the summer of 2020, Coventry University famously created a July intake to allow students from the European Union to enrol ahead of drastic changes to their fee status. Due to the impact from Brexit students were due to transition from Home fee status to full international fees in the following September.

Students who were able to enrol at Coventry two months ahead of time avoided this significant price hike. They were required to take an online module that bridged the gap to when they were due on campus in the autumn.

The move was widely seen as a success although in cases, certain EU nationalities did not receive their high school examination results or leaving certificates in time to be enrolled so early in the summer.

At the time some stakeholders questioned the legality of such a move, although it is unclear if the Office for Students were required to sanction new intakes.

“This is part our long-term strategy and reinforces our drive to provide as much choice and flexibility as possible”

Similar questions may be raised with any university introducing a new winter intake at this late stage.

The PIE News understands that several institutions have been considering introducing a November 2023 intake while monitoring applications to see if there is a shortfall related to dependant visa changes.

Buoyant numbers for the January intake however, have dissuade many from this course of action, although it remains to be seen if students are completely aware of the rule changes on the ground in key source markets.

A spokesperson for Teesside University London said: “Teesside University London has implemented an innovative new delivery model and we will have three intakes of students, both undergraduate and postgraduate, from September, November and January. This is part our long-term strategy and reinforces our drive to provide as much choice and flexibility as possible for all of our students across a diverse range of programs.”

The post Winter intake offers final entry before UK dependant visa changes appeared first on The PIE News.