
Revealed: How easy it is to get a first at your university
When a 2:1 just isn’t enough
It may come as a surprise, but one of the main reasons to go to university is to come out the other side with a degree. Getting a 2:2 is almost unimaginable and if you want an actual job a 2:1 is a must. But the coveted first is becoming easier and easier to get, apparently. Not that it feels that way when you’re sat in the library for hours labouring over a dissertation that is slowly making less and less sense.
But if you’re University College London or Aston University, you’re in luck. They give out the most first class degrees, with 33 per cent of their students coming out of university with a first.
30 per cent of Oxford’s students and LSE students also graduate with a first, according to data obtained from the Higher Education Statistics Agency.
Rounding out the top ten are Bath, Birmingham and Durham with 28 per cent, St Andrews claiming the top spot in Scotland with 27 per cent, and Loughborough and Kent with 26 per cent.
Aberystwyth came last with only 14 per cent of students obtaining first class honours. Other universities that scored poorly include Chester with 15 per cent, Dundee with 16 per cent, and Aberdeen, Falmouth and UCLan giving only 17 per cent of students firsts.
See the full list below:
Aberdeen – 17 per cent
Aberystwyth – 14 per cent
Aston – 33 per cent
Bath – 28 per cent
Belfast – 21 per cent
Birmingham – 28 per cent
Bristol – 25 per cent
Brookes – 18 per cent
Cardiff – 21 per cent
Dundee – 16 per cent
Durham – 28 per cent
Edinburgh – 22 per cent
Exeter – 21 per cent
Falmouth – 17 per cent
Glasgow – 19 per cent
Hull – 19 per cent
Kent – 26 per cent
King’s – 25 per cent
Leeds – 24 per cent
Leicester – 19 per cent
Lincoln – 18 per cent
Liverpool – 23 per cent
Liverpool John Moores – 22 per cent
Loughborough – 26 per cent
LSE – 29 per cent
Manchester – 25 per cent
Newcastle – 21 per cent
Northumbria – 23 per cent
Nottingham – 24 per cent
Nottingham Trent – 21 per cent
Oxford – 30 per cent
Plymouth – 20 per cent
Portsmouth – 22 per cent
Queen Mary’s – 21 per cent
Reading – 23 per cent
Royal Holloway – 22 per cent
Sheffield – 21 per cent
Southampton – 25 per cent
St Andrews – 27 per cent
Strathclyde – 22 per cent
Stirling – 21 per cent
Sussex – 21 per cent
UCL – 33 per cent
UCLan – 17 per cent
UWE – 22 per cent
York – 25 per cent