Scottish Undergrad Applicant Statistics

Adam made this Freedom of Information request to London School of Economics Automatic anti-spam measures are in place for this older request. Please let us know if a further response is expected or if you are having trouble responding.

The request was partially successful.

Dear London School of Economics,
Please provide me with the following-

(1)Number of scottish applicants for the 2018, 2019, 2021 admissions process for every applied to undergraduate degree

(2)show N5, Higher and Advanced Higher grades as well as subjects and grade bandings,

(3) clearly indicate offer receivers beside subjects taken and grades achieved at each level (n5,H,AH)

(4)provide numbers of state school and independent school applicants as well as success rates for both in terms of numbers and percentages.

Yours faithfully,
Adam Macleod

GLPD.Info.Rights, London School of Economics

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GLPD.Info.Rights, London School of Economics

1 Attachment

Dear Adam,

Further to your recent FoI request, the Schools response is provided below:

Please see attached.

LSE does not spilt UK applicants into England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. We have provided students who have Scottish qualifications.
For question 4 we have included the raw school type and application decision data.

If you think that the information provided does not meet your request, contact Rachael Maguire at [email address] or write to Louise Nadal, School Secretary, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE. We will then review the response to your request and get back to you within 20 working days. You can also contact the Information Commissioner's Office http://www.ico.gov.uk/, though they expect the internal review to be carried out before receiving a complaint directly.

The provision of information by the LSE under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 does not imply a right to copy, reproduce publish or otherwise use such information. Copying or reproducing such information in any way either in whole or in part without prior written consent may be an infringement of copyright or other intellectual property right belonging to the LSE or a third party.

Yours sincerely,
The Information Rights Team
London School of Economics

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