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OfS recruits for ¡®provider board¡¯ as Peck signals new approach

<ÍøÆØÃÅ class="standfirst">Regulator wants vice-chancellors to advise on policy as part of new chair¡¯s attempts to build better relationship with sector
Published on
September 4, 2025
Last updated
September 4, 2025
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Source: iStock/Volodymyr Chmut

The English regulator has called for vice-chancellors to join a ¡°provider board¡± as its new chair seeks to repair its relationship with bruised universities.

In a first-of-its-kind initiative for the Office for Students (OfS), a panel of 12 senior leaders will be convened to be a ¡°critical friend¡± on policy decisions.

Edward Peck, the former vice-chancellor of Nottingham Trent University who began his stint as OfS chair over the summer, said it was a ¡°clear indication¡± that the regulator was being ¡°repositioned¡±.

Mirroring the words of his predecessor David Behan, who authored a critical report into the regulator before becoming its interim chair, Peck told the Universities UK conference that the OfS had often ¡°mistaken distance for independence¡±.

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Since its inception, the regulator has faced fierce criticism about the burden of over-regulation and being too quick to follow the political whims of ministers.

Peck said the OfS under his watch will be focused on partnership working and be a champion of the higher education sector as a ¡°force for good, for individuals, for communities, and for the country¡±, values that will be reflected when it releases the final version of its next strategy in November.

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He also signalled that a revised?Teaching Excellence Framework will have ¡°regulatory bite¡± and that the OfS will intervene ¡°where we judge student fees are being used for purposes other than genuine study¡±.

¡°We have a mutual interest in getting regulation right for the benefit of students, wider society and higher education institutions themselves¡±, Peck told the conference.

¡°Perhaps now more than ever, the sector needs a regulator which is a confident and credible voice with the current debates about the quality and relevance of higher education.¡±

But Peck signalled universities would not have things all their own way. He accused ¡°some in the sector¡± of making ¡°life more difficult for both itself and for us at the OfS¡±.

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¡°Let¡¯s be honest, one of the fastest methods of reducing the burden and cost of regulation would be for some of you to give us ¨C and government ¨C less to worry about.¡±

He cited?as an example providers that ¡°could have taken more steps earlier to prepare for probable reductions in institutional income rather than rely on over-optimistic student number projections¡±.

Peck also singled out those that ¡°could have avoided adopting inadequate arrangements with those organisations to which they have franchised provision¡±.

But, rather than dwell on these issues,?he said, he wanted to focus on developing a new attitude for the OfS.

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The regulator¡¯s new provider board, which will start work in January 2026, will be made up of leaders from across the sector.

It will be tasked with ¡°offering advice and constructive challenge¡± on current and future OfS policy, the regulator said.

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tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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<ÍøÆØÃÅ class="pane-title"> Reader's comments (1)
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Yes, I am sure that Mr Peck is well placed to convene a panel of vice chancellors to oversee the work of the OFS given that he was a board member of UUK for three years. The OFS should be fiercely standing up for the rights and interests of Students , so it absolutely should find itself completely at odds with the commercially motivated UUK on a frequent basis otherwise it isn't doing it's job properly. So it isn't a failing on it's part that the OFS upsets the HE sector as this article suggests.
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