Show caption Students check their A-level results. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA Higher education University gender gap at record high as 30,000 more women accepted Ucas says young women a third more likely to go to university than men, and overall admissions are down on last year Press Association Sun 27 Aug 2017 19.01 EDT Share on Facebook

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Women are now more than a third more likely to go to university than men, according to new figures that show the gap between the sexes has reached record levels.



About 30,000 more women than men are set to start degree courses this autumn, Ucas data shows.

Figures from the university admissions service also show that around 6,600 fewer students have been placed on courses so far this year compared with at the same point last year.

As of Friday morning, 133,280 British women aged 18 had secured a university place, compared with 103,800 British men of this age.

Ucas said it was the largest gap it had recorded at this point of the admissions cycle, just over a week after A-levels were published.

Its analysis shows that across the UK 27.3% of all young men are expected to go to university this year, compared with 37.1% of young women. That means 18-year-old women are 36% more likely to start degree courses this autumn than their male peers.

Last year they were 35% more likely to enter higher education, and five years ago they were 31% more likely. Ucas suggests one factor contributing to the gender difference is a 9% increase in the number of 18-year-olds placed on nursing courses this year. Women significantly outnumber men for these degrees, with around 28 women recruited for every man.

Previous figures have shown a drop in nursing applications and acceptances this year, but this has been driven by falls in the number of older students rather than among 18-year-olds.

Mark Corver, Ucas’s director of analysis and research, said: “More UK 18-year-olds will be starting university this autumn than ever before but large differences in who goes remain. Our research has shown that the difference between 18-year-old men and women entering university is now similar to that between the richest and poorest halves of the population. The statistics today show the difference between men and women slowly growing wider.”

As of Friday morning, 482,510 students had secured a university place, down by about 1.4% on the same point last year but higher than in any other year at this point.