Russell Group welcomes Prime Minister's speech on science

27 February 2009

Responding to the speech made by the Prime Minister on ‘Science and our Economic Future’ at the University of Oxford, Director General of The Russell Group of Universities, Dr Wendy Piatt, said:

“We welcome the Prime Minister’s comments which underline the importance of science teaching and research to the UK’s economic prosperity and social well-being.

"Today's commitment to the ring-fenced science budget sends a clear and positive signal about the UK's commitment to world class research and the crucial role that our research-intensive universities play in making the UK more competitive, prosperous and innovative. Sustaining the success of UK science in the face of fierce global competition and severe economic conditions is a formidable challenge. So it is important that limited government funds are concentrated on fostering excellence and building on success to enable the UK to compete with the best in the world.

“Investment in science has already placed the United Kingdom at the forefront of pioneering new technology. Most recently this funding has allowed for breakthroughs at Russell Group universities in discoveries of new hydrogen energy, genetic mapping of Alzheimer's disease and new discoveries of the use of nanotechnology for cellular biology, to name a few.

“We are particularly pleased that the Prime Minister has announced measures to increase the uptake of STEM subjects at school. Russell Group universities have been concerned by the long-term decline in pupils taking science and mathematics at GCSE and A-level, particularly in state schools. In order to improve STEM teaching, our universities are building strong relationships with local schools and colleges as well as engaging with curriculum reform.

“Subject choices can be crucial to maximising a young person's life chances so students must have access to quality information, advice and guidance. For example, students who take maths A-level are not only equipped to take a range of courses at university, they also earn, on average, up to 11% more than their peers who do not take maths beyond the age of 16. Numeracy is also essential for many undergraduate courses at Russell Group universities, particularly in engineering, economics and medicine.”
/end.

Notes:

1. During the Romanes Lecture 2009 on ‘Science and our Economic Future’, the Prime Minister stated “Some say that now is not the time to invest, but the bottom line is that the downturn is no time to slow down our investment in science but to build more vigorously for the future. And so we will not allow science to become a victim of the recession - but rather focus on developing it as a key element of our path to recovery.”

2. Studies by Anna Vignoles and Peter Dolton have found that "individuals who have mathematics A Level earn between 7% and 11% more than otherwise similar individuals who do not take mathematics beyond the age of 16”:

Media enquiries

Email the Russell Group
020 7969 5254
075 3060 2945

General enquiries

Email the Russell Group
Telephone 020 7969 5330

Follow RussellGroup on Twitter

Latest University News

University of Birmingham bids to set up new secondary school and sixth form

The University of Birmingham is hoping to extend its excellent academic education to 11-18 year olds in Birmingham and is preparing to submit plans for a new free school to the Department for Education.If approved, the new University of Birmingham School and Sixth Form school will be a mixed ability, co-educational state school for pupils aged 11-16 plus sixth formers. It will be based near to the University's main campus in Edgbaston/Selly Oak and focus on academic rather than vocational subjects in order to prepare pupils for selective universities. The School aims to open in September 2014, taking 150 pupils into Year 7 and 200 into the Sixth Form.

Bristol PLuS Award Employability Skills Day

The University will be holding its first Employability Skills Day for students on 16 February 2012.

Under the Microscope #5 – Daisy

In this video Dr Beverley Glover explains how a daisy is a collection of tiny flowers grouped together to make it look like a single big flower.

£4.5M biomedical research boost

University research secures new Wellcome Trust and NISCHR funding

Surface of Mars an unlikely place for life after 600 million year drought, say

New study suggests super-drought made it too hostile for any life survive on the Mars' surface - News Release

2nd Languages Festival

University of Leeds Language Centre and Languages at LeedsMet University have joined forces again to organise the 2nd Languages Festival, as part of the national 'Speak to the Future' campaign.

Demographics demand that we don't keep spending

Letter from Dr Ros Altmann, LSE governor, in response to an article on the economic downturn . - Financial Times

Graphene electronics moves into a third dimension

Wonder material graphene has been touted as the next silicon, with one major problem – it is too conductive to be used in computer chips. Now scientists from The University of Manchester have given its prospects a new lifeline.

Green potential of our industrial past

Manipulating the soil in urban and industrial areas in order to capture more carbon from the atmosphere is the “best resource we have to begin to mitigate human CO2 emissions”, experts claim.

'Goldilocks' gene could determine best treatment for TB patients

Tuberculosis patients may receive treatments in the future according to what version they have of a single 'Goldilocks' gene, says an international research team from Oxford University, King’s College London, Vietnam and the USA.

Spring 2012 concert season set to explore music, disability, health and wellbeing

The University of Sheffield has today (3 February 2012) announced the new spring concert season which commences this month organised by the Department of Music. Highlights this season include a series ...

Find out how Southampton is changing the world

All next week (6-10 February), the University of Southampton is showcasing how its research is helping to solve some of today’s big global issues such as climate change, energy, the ageing population, high-tech crime and lifestyle diseases.

Ten years of Student Volunteering at UCL

To celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Volunteering Services Unit at UCL, the Wilkins South Cloisters is currently home to an exhibition of photographs showing some of the vast number of volunteering projects UCL students have been involved with over the last decade.