Entry & outcomes at Hopwood Hall College

Who gets into Hopwood Hall College, who continues, who graduates, who earns a top degree class, and who moves into skilled work — broken down by background. Latest available year: 2023-24. Full-time undergraduates only.

Source: OfS Access and Participation dashboard · Numbers below 23 students are suppressed by OfS to protect privacy.

Who is admitted

Share of new students from each background.

By neighbourhood deprivation

Every English neighbourhood is ranked from most to least deprived. Q1 = students from the poorest 20% of neighbourhoods; Q5 = students from the richest 20%.

Most deprived 20%
57.1%
Q2
28.6%
Q4
10.2%

By area participation in university

Areas are ranked by how often local 18-year-olds go to university. Q1 = areas where few young people go; Q5 = areas where most do.

Areas where fewest go to uni
13.2%
Q2
31.6%
Q3
31.6%
Q4
21.1%

By ethnicity

Self-identified ethnicity at application.

Asian
8.2%
Mixed
12.2%
White
75.5%

By sex

Reported sex.

Male
85.7%
Female
14.3%

By reported disability

Whether the student declared a disability at application — voluntary disclosure.

No declared disability
65.3%
Declared a disability
34.7%

By free school meals eligibility

Whether the student was recorded as eligible for free school meals during compulsory schooling — a marker for low household income.

Not eligible
58.3%
Eligible for free school meals
41.7%

Who continues to year 2

Share of students who progressed past their first year.

By neighbourhood deprivation

Every English neighbourhood is ranked from most to least deprived. Q1 = students from the poorest 20% of neighbourhoods; Q5 = students from the richest 20%.

Most deprived 20%
83.3%

By ethnicity

Self-identified ethnicity at application.

White
69.0%

By sex

Reported sex.

Female
81.6%

By reported disability

Whether the student declared a disability at application — voluntary disclosure.

No declared disability
69.2%

By free school meals eligibility

Whether the student was recorded as eligible for free school meals during compulsory schooling — a marker for low household income.

Not eligible
82.6%

Who completes their degree

Share of students who graduated within the expected window.

By neighbourhood deprivation

Every English neighbourhood is ranked from most to least deprived. Q1 = students from the poorest 20% of neighbourhoods; Q5 = students from the richest 20%.

Most deprived 20%
57.1%

By ethnicity

Self-identified ethnicity at application.

White
61.3%

By sex

Reported sex.

Male
52.2%

By reported disability

Whether the student declared a disability at application — voluntary disclosure.

No declared disability
50.0%

By free school meals eligibility

Whether the student was recorded as eligible for free school meals during compulsory schooling — a marker for low household income.

Not eligible
62.5%