Now in its fourth year, the ground-breaking partnership between the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow and educational charity IntoUniversity has supported thousands of young people in the Craigmillar area in Edinburgh and Glasgow’s Maryhill and Govan.
The ongoing project aims to expand opportunities for those who may face challenges during their schooling, with close to 4,000 school pupils accessing the service in the past year alone.
As the project enters its second phase, the partners are looking to obtain further funding to secure the ongoing operation of the centres and explore new opportunities for community engagement projects.
Invaluable support
Since the IntoUniversity centres opened, more than 70 per cent of school leavers from the programme have progressed to university or college, compared with the national average of 24 per cent of those from similar backgrounds.
The three centres have teams of specially trained staff who work closely with local schools in areas traditionally associated with social deprivation.
Each centre provides a programme of after-school academic support, mentoring, workshops and work experience for young people aged between seven and eighteen years old.
The centres have seen growing numbers of pupils taking part in the programme, with a jump of more than ten per cent in the past year – from 3,592 to 3,975.
Results for the 2023/24 academic year also show that an average of 75 per cent of those accessing the partnership’s Academic Support programme reported that they were working better in school.