All Manchester students to go out on placement as part of degrees

Universities must provide more of the types of experiences that would once have been gained during first graduate job, says vice-chancellor

Published on
May 26, 2026
Last updated
May 26, 2026
Manchester University main campus building at Oxford road
Source: iStock/mpalis

All students at the University of Manchester will soon be expected to take part in work placements or exchanges, according to its vice-chancellor, who has stressed three years solely spent in academia is not enough preparation for the changing world of work.

All undergraduate programmes at the Russell Group university will contain some element of practical experience going forward, Duncan Ivison, who has led the university since August 2024, has announced.

Students will be expected to use the period after exams in the summer term to take part in internships, placements, joint projects or exchanges – across all disciplines.

The move mirrors professional taught degrees in areas such as medicine and teaching, where on-the job experience is an essential part of the programme.

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Ivison said that universities needed to equip students with more chance to “put their learning into context”.

“When they’re with us, we need to pull into our students’ experience more of what they would have normally got in that traditional first job out of uni — practical, diverse experiences”, he told The Times.

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“Employers and industry partners hugely value the disciplinary insights students bring. It’s giving our students a chance to put their learning into context. It doesn’t matter if you’re a history student or a chemical engineer. What does it mean to take those skills and apply them to the problems of a customer or patient or government agency?”

Universities are facing a growing crisis of confidence among the general public, with increasing numbers questioning whether a degree is worth the expense.

The issue has been exacerbated by concerns over ballooning student debt and the difficulties many have experienced securing graduate-level roles.

The rise of artificial intelligence is expected to reshape and replace many roles that graduates would have traditionally filled, leading to calls for universities to look again at the skills they are passing on to the next generation.

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Ivison said that evidence from the 500-odd students doing internships this year showed that they come back feeling more “confident describing their relevant skills and are more job-ready”.

“There’s no constraint on discipline. [It] gives our students the confidence that you have got a valuable skill set that you can then take out into the labour market.”

tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

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