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Do university rankings really matter?

33 replies

Parsley65 · 24/11/2019 10:55

DS (now in second year at uni) was all over the university rankings when it came to choosing where to go and eventually picked a prestigious establishment that was in the top ten for his chosen subject.

DD (Y12) is taking a different approach and says that as long as the course she chooses is fully accredited by the professional body, then it doesn't matter about rankings.

Is she right?

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BubblesBuddy · 28/11/2019 00:25

Those universities are all top 20 though so with placements they might be ok. Try and see how many actually become psychologists. Ask at open days. I don’t think Bath is full of nerds. That’s a bit immature and worthy of psychological discussion!

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BubblesBuddy · 28/11/2019 00:15

It’s a great shame the universities don’t say how many grads actually become psychologists or work in the field. They just have the stat on grad employment or training which could mean any job or training. Of the young people I know who did Psychology, one is a social worker and one is a political journalist! So who knows what jobs other psychology degree holders have? The lack of info doesn’t help with decision making.

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Momocat33 · 27/11/2019 19:38

My dd is in research psychology, post doc at a good uni that pays decent wages but is 3 year contract. May I say it takes alot of dedication and has got to be something you love. As you will compromise alot for the profession.. . You will need a master and a PhD and specialise in a area of psychology as it is very broad from neuro psych, social, cognitive to language etc It's not easy to get a funded PhD unless you have lots of good quality research type experience jobs through Masters or internships. Have good grades. Bonus is if you've worked with people who are reknowed in your field or departments that are well known or have some publication under your belt. You will also have to move around a bit. Have lots of set backs with null result experiments that have taken ages to construct and lots of time with participants. Feels like wasted alot of money in doing so.

As I said earlier can end up post doc research for along time until something permanent and long term comes along. Theres not much job security in that sense. But having said that dd loves it immensely and feels she is doing something worthwhile and there is a lot of job satisfaction. Good community team spirit where she is.

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LemonPrism · 27/11/2019 14:23

Depends. Certainly helped me to have a 1st from a top 10.

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Parsley65 · 27/11/2019 14:14

Thank you all for taking the time to respond.
DS is already at in his second year at Bath (and loves it) and it's put DD off as she wants to carve her own path Grin
She has looked at Cardiff, Uni of Sussex and Loughborough so far. All have placement years. She is not (her words) such a 'nerd' as her brother and doesn't think she'll have the grades to get into the very top rated universities.
She's not 100% sure yet, but wants to do something involving research.

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tunnocksreturns2019 · 25/11/2019 22:06

I recommend finding out about support given to students looking for a placement during their degree - this is an area where the aforementioned Bath excels, for example

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BubblesBuddy · 25/11/2019 21:55

The question is about Psychology and where is best to go if you want to actually be a Psychologist. No one has said it has to be RG and Bath, which is ranked very highly for this subject, isn’t RG. So the RG argument is not really what this is about. The question is: where is best to actually become a psychologist?

If you didn’t actually want to work in this highly competitive field then there is a wide choice of courses, and it might not matter which course or which university. However the top 10 will always be better than the bottom 10 if you need an accredited course with a chance of being a psychologist.

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spacepyramid · 25/11/2019 18:08

DD (Y12) is taking a different approach and says that as long as the course she chooses is fully accredited by the professional body, then it doesn't matter about rankings.

Is she right?


I was talking to a lecturer about this the other day. They were saying that they were surprised that their subject was accredited by the professional body at some of the universities as the teaching was to a high standard at both but the level of work was much easier at one than the other - i.e. 1st year being stuff done at A level for students without the subject at A level at one whereas it was way more advanced at the other and the work set for independent study was much easier at one than the other. They've taught at various universities of different rankings.

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Supersimkin2 · 25/11/2019 18:03

Grin @Needmore sleep

OP, of course it does.

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Needmoresleep · 25/11/2019 17:59

The Russell group is called that because they met in the Russell Hotel. Just as well they did not meet in a Travellodge.

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MarchingFrogs · 25/11/2019 17:35

many people in positions of influence genuinely believe membership of the Russell Group confers magical powers

The Kimpton Fitzroy Groupdoesn't have the same ring, somehow, does it?

I've always preferred the Tavistock, myself. I do love a good bit of Art DecoSmile

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Xenia · 25/11/2019 17:31

I graduated in 1982 before the 1994 foundation of the Russell Group. In my day and today the rankins were pretty much as now for the to places, Oxford and Cambridge, below that Durham, Bristol etc. I don't think it's changed much. Durham and Bristol rejected me and I went to Manchester and did fine. 3 of children went to or are at Bristol (and all 3 rejected Durham) and none of my 5 tried for Oxbridge.

Just go for the hardest to get into uinversity with the highest grade requirements you can get as has always been the best advice and go from there.

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SirTobyBelch · 25/11/2019 16:34

Also I do wonder how some universities maintain their "elite" status.

I'm afraid it's self-perpetuating. Apart from the fact that many people in positions of influence genuinely believe membership of the Russell Group confers magical powers, they also make judgements on the basis that some universities rated highly for certain subjects weren't "proper universities" when they were students 30-40 years ago and therefore the ratings must be wrong.

Of course, the Russell Group was only invented a little over 30 years ago - as a lobby group to promote the interests of a self-selected "elite" - so these institutions weren't in the Russell Group when the ministers & senior civil servants studied there.

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Serin · 25/11/2019 14:03

I think it depends.
I know 2 kids who went to Oxbridge and couldn't hack it. Both dropped out, restarted at less intense institutions and thrived.
Our DS has offers from Durham and York, he much prefers the atmosphere at York and will likely choose to go there. Possibly mad, but his choice.
Some excellent degree apprenticeships have their theory content based in lower ranking universities eg we were surprised to see GCHQ approved degrees at Royal Holloway and Oxford Brooke's.
Also I do wonder how some universities maintain their "elite" status. Despite going to Liverpool myself (30years ago) I wouldn't have thought it could compete with the likes of Loughborough/Bath/Warwick these days, and yet it's right there in the RG.Confused

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BubblesBuddy · 25/11/2019 13:40

Check out Bath. I think they have excellent courses with a year’s placement. This is invaluable. They are looking for very well qualified students and DO look at GCSEs and mathematical ability. Bath are ranked 3rd so their info is very relevant to high flyers in this field who wish to practice. If she doesn’t meet their academic criteria, work back in the league tables to see where is less academic in intake. Bath do accept Psychology A level (I think most do) but on a competitive course one would think maths and biology were also great A levels.

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BreakfastAtLitanies · 25/11/2019 08:33

For Psychology, yes it very much matters which university she studied at if she wants to go into clinical/mental health etc as that is one of the most competitive fields coming out of the degree, as well as forensic Psychology. It's actually incredibly hard to get even placements in this field due to the competition, let alone start a career in it. (studying for a psych degree myself, with friends wanting to go into mental health, though I do not want to). So would recommend the best ranked university she can get in to, as sadly employers do look at this.

If she "just" wants to be a research Psychologist, it will not matter as much in terms of university though as it's such a competitive and popular subject, I'd still try to get the best university possible.

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CherryPavlova · 25/11/2019 07:58

Yes the university matters. In some fields, it matters a lot.
Medical students rankings for foundation programme jobs include points for the university attended - so can help decide whether you go to Oxford, London or Carlisle to live.
If you’re entering a competitive field after university then it really matters that it’s RG. The university placements and internships that open doors later on will be dependent on the university in many cases.

The big four want RG for their graduate programmes. Hospitals will be less fussy where their nurses graduated from.

Psychology is notoriously competitive, a long training programme and they’ll have the pick of high achievers from the most prestigious universities.

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SoxiFodoujUmed · 25/11/2019 07:48

omg for psychology there is no point going to any university that isn't in the top 5 for that subject, unless she is planning to only do the degree for Interest's sake and will be pursuing a degree in an unrelated field where any 2:1 is fine. if she wants to actually practice Psychology then she will also need to work her socks off, because although the postgraduate opportunities say on their entry requirements that all they need is 2:1 from any accredited course, the reality is that there are more applicants with a 1st class degree from a top university than there are spaces available so anything less than this won't get a look-in.

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CmdrCressidaDuck · 25/11/2019 07:36

For psychology I'd say she needs to go to the most prestigious uni she can get into. Every uni has a course, there are buckets of grads, it doesn't qualify you for anything directly so your options are train in one of the post-grad psychology routes, for which you need work experience and the best degree you can get, or you're on the graduate market in which case you need work experience and the best degree you can get.

Just being accredited for psychology undergrad is the bare minimum really. The professional postgraduate routes are different, only a few unis run them in many cases so accreditation is the most important factor.

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stucknoue · 25/11/2019 07:27

Just seen the update - psychology is one of the most popular degrees out there. There's serious oversupply of graduates, she needs to work out what she thinks she will do with her degree, marketing for instance may be a good alternative as a degree. Also many universities don't rate the a level so check that it won't count against her before choosing, they had twice as many applicants as places here and was one of the courses that doesn't go into clearing usually.

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stucknoue · 25/11/2019 07:22

The answer is, it depends! The ranking of the university overall can mask huge variations within departments so for professional jobs eg architecture, engineering, etc. it will be well known where the best courses are. However if you are doing English or history then applying into the graduate job market the overall ranking matters more.

All that said, unless you succeed at your course it's irrelevant so it's essential they find the size and location that is a good fit, even consider staying home if that's more suited to their personality. I know 2 Cambridge drops outs now in their final year of a middling university who said it was dreadful there if you weren't from a certain background and/or certain personality type, they also were really bad about mental health issues, heard the same about Warwick .... yet know kids at Warwick who love it. Also can they afford to live in that city, if cost of housing means they need to work more it could impact grades - the difference between a 2.1 and 2.2 is more than going to ucl and a middling university when it comes to jobs

Note there's loads of different lead tables so to take my DD's university as an example, it ranges from 19-62 depending on what factors they choose, her department is ranked from 8-46.

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Pomley · 25/11/2019 07:18

What does your DD want to do for a career? If it's something such as being a Psychologist, then as long as the degree is accredited, I would go somewhere where there are opportunities to volunteer alongside studying, and where she feels like she would thrive; getting a first or at minimum a 2:1 would make getting on to a Master's reasonable, and in reality, she could apply for that at a more prestigious uni if need be. Psychology on its own as an undergraduate degree doesn't lead to much aside from 'generic' grad jobs- it would probably help immensely if she had an idea of what she wanted to do when she graduated and researched it. A lot of my friends studied it at degree level, and have been surprised at the lack of opportunities. As it is, I went to an ex-poly probably not even on the league tables and it's never held me back.

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SoxiFodoujUmed · 25/11/2019 07:06

it depends on the career, and how popular it is. does she think she will be up against a lot of competition when she is job hunting?

to singer extent the university is effectively a "brand image" for the graduate - although that's an image based on real factors in the quality of teaching and research.

If someone is choosing a dozen apples and has a range of supermarket brands to choose from, including sainsbury's "taste the difference", waitrose 1, Asda's Smart Price, Tesco both "Finest" and "Value" and Aldi & Lidl. They will all have passed the UK food safety standards (equivalent of accreditation) but you know that some will be better than others. if you can't taste a sample and the choosing scenario doesn't have a difference in price to consider then you will go for the premium brands, and may well guess that a waitrose "essential" might be just as nice or even nicer than an asda Extra Special.

recruiters for graduate roles are generally overwhelmed with mid applications than they can ever read. the prestige of the university is often a quick first criterion for getting the number of applications down to a manageable level.

once someone has been in a career for a year or two then it stops mattering, but you can't get to that point without a first job.

So as well as the overall university rankings look at the employability stats for the individual courses. you should be able to find details of what percentage of graduates are employed (subdivided by whether or not the job is using their degree) and those stats may reveal that a slightly less prestigious university actually has the edge in a particular field.

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Parsley65 · 25/11/2019 06:39

She is passionate about studying psychology.
She has done the GSCE and is now doing the A level.
Really appreciating the feedback.
She'll be looking at the different universities/courses in the new year.

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BubblesBuddy · 25/11/2019 00:48

There are variables here depending what degree and accreditation you are talking about. Some newer universities have excellent courses that are valued by local employers. Other universities would be better if you were aiming for a certain career where prestigious university matters, eg Law. So subject matters. A lot.

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