KIS met

This is a (brief) heads-up about a Hefce plan for universities to produce so-called Key information Sets (KIS) which will provide information to university applicants in a standard form.

(Apologies if your head was already up, and I’m one of the few whose head wasn’t.)

The plan arose out of a consultation on how to make information from HE/FE institutions more useful and accessible.

To quote Hefce:

Key Information Sets are comparable sets of standardised information about undergraduate courses. They are designed to meet the information needs of prospective students and will be published ‘in context’ on the web-sites of universities and colleges.

Timetable and workload data, contact hours and assessment methods are certain to form part of these sets, along with a range of other info, such as:

  • student satisfaction
  • course information
  • employment and salary data
  • accommodation costs
  • financial information, such as fees
  • students’ union information.

The aim, I’d assume, is also to provide this information as raw data that can be analysed and deployed by third-party organisations.

The university is already involved in stage one of this project.

In the meantime, there’s useful background and guidance on the Hefce site.

Maybe we should start thinking about this in the run-up to 2012? It could mean, for example, that we need to standardise our course information and procedures much more.

And, yes, it is a terrible headline.

It could have been worse, though.  I did toy with KIS met hardly…but thought better of it.

3 thoughts on “KIS met

  1. I’m intrigued to know what these KISes are going to actually look like. Will they be completely standardised across all institutions? Have HEFCE released an example of what they’re going to look like? Will the data be extractable and combinable – i.e. a cross-institution KIS API?

    (I’d have gone for “Sealed with a KIS”, myself. But then I don’t have your light touch with a headline.)

    While I’m on the subject, why ‘Claro‘? Is it an edjikated literary reference, and as such way above my head? (Speaking as someone for whom ‘Kismet’ will only ever mean this place, the best Indian takeaway in the Fens, hands down.)

  2. I assume the data will be extractable, and that we’ll see all kinds of combinations and comparisons.

    Sealed with a KIS – I like it. I’ll certainly steal that if I do another post on this.

    Claro – nothing so erudite, I’m afraid. It’s just Spanish for obviously…yes, of course…
    Just to prove my year of Spanish wasn’t wasted…

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