A university summer school isn’t just an outreach activity. For many students, it’s their first lived experience of higher education — the moment they stop imagining university and start picturing themselves in it.
That’s why the admissions process into the summer school matters so much. If the application journey is fragmented, confusing, or slow, it can undo the confidence and belonging these programmes are designed to build — right at the point students are deciding whether they “fit” in higher education.
And for universities running summer schools at scale — thousands of places each year — admissions isn’t a side process. It’s a core workflow sitting at the heart of recruitment performance.
In the UK, university summer schools are typically structured outreach programmes delivered over the summer break, often on campus and sometimes residential, combining subject tasters, workshops, and social activities.
Most are designed to support widening participation, targeting students who have academic potential but face barriers to higher education — including those from lower socio-economic backgrounds, care leavers, carers, disabled students, and underrepresented ethnic groups.
They’re also resource-intensive by nature — TASO explicitly categorises summer schools as a high-cost intervention — because the experience is the point: the campus immersion, the social confidence, and the “I can belong here” moment.
It’s important to be candid: the UK evidence base is still developing, especially on causal impact. TASO notes that summer schools are widely used and correlate with positive outcomes, but causal evidence is limited and work is ongoing through randomised trials.
That said, credible evaluations do show meaningful differences in behaviour and progression when comparing participants to similar peers.
A University of Bristol evaluation of Sutton Trust Summer Schools found that attendees were more likely to apply to university (93% vs 88%) and register/enrol (84% vs 68%) compared to unsuccessful applicants to the programme. British Council
TASO’s interim RCT report (face-to-face summer schools across five universities) reinforces a key insight: many applicants are already highly motivated — 95% of survey respondents were ‘likely’ or ‘extremely likely’ to apply to HE — so the value is less about “creating aspiration” and more about building confidence, fit, and practical readiness.
So the strongest evidence-led way to frame summer schools is this:
Summer schools work best as a confidence and belonging accelerator for students who already have potential — helping more of them convert that potential into successful applications, offers and enrolments.
From a recruitment perspective, summer schools do three strategic jobs:
1) They pull demand earlier in the cycle
They create meaningful engagement before UCAS applications, when preferences are still forming — and when an institution can shape perception through experience rather than marketing.
2) They reduce uncertainty — especially for underrepresented students
TASO’s interim results suggest summer schools can have a small positive effect on students’ perceptions of “fitting in”, and qualitative findings reinforce how valuable social confidence can be.
3) They support conversion into the institution, particularly where summer schools connect to contextual admissions
Many universities now link access programmes and summer school participation to contextual admissions policies, including reduced grade offers or additional consideration.
This matters because it turns a summer school from “an experience” into a pathway — and pathways create commitment.
A major reason summer schools influence recruitment outcomes is that they increasingly connect to contextual admissions — where a student’s background is considered and entry requirements may be reduced to make access fairer.
Newcastle University’s PARTNERS scheme is a clear example: students who complete the PARTNERS Academic Summer School can receive a contextual offer up to three A-level grades lower than the typical offer (with some exceptions such as Medicine and Dentistry).
At a system level, the Sutton Trust also explains that contextual admissions can include reduced grade offers and that participation in programmes such as summer schools may contribute to eligibility (depending on university policy). [suttontrust.com]
When a university offers a credible pathway and then delivers a coherent student experience around it, the conversion effect is obvious: students don’t just learn “what university is like” — they gain a realistic route to getting there.
Here’s the part universities often underestimate.
Summer schools are designed to build trust, confidence and belonging — and that means the operational journey into the programme is part of the intervention, whether universities intend it or not.
If a student encounters:
the message they receive isn’t “you belong here”. It’s “this is not built for you”.
This matters most for widening participation cohorts, because the same students summer schools are trying to support are often those who feel least confident navigating complex systems.
For some institutions, summer school admissions is a high-volume workflow.
One UK university Crimson works with hosts around 4,500 students attending its summer school in a year.
At that scale, summer school admissions typically includes:
This is why “a standalone summer school tool” often becomes a bottleneck — creating duplicate data entry and fragmented processes across teams.
In that same example, the university previously used a standalone system not integrated in any way, which created double handling and disjointed workflows — precisely the kind of friction that erodes experience and consumes staff capacity.
Crimson’s approach is built on a simple principle:
If summer school is part of the student journey, managing admissions into summer school must be part of the admissions journey — not a separate island.
In practice, Crimson’s solution streamlines summer school admissions by:
1) Surfacing eligibility and the summer school option in the student experience
Rather than sending students into separate tools, eligible students can be presented with the summer school pathway as part of a joined-up journey.
2) Managing the application workflow end-to-end
Applications can be assessed, decisions communicated, and outcomes tracked — reducing manual handling and creating clearer visibility for teams.
3) Feeding outcomes back into admissions conditions and conversion activity
In the example discussed, the summer school pathway is tied to reduced offers and admissions conditions — meaning the summer school decisioning becomes part of the broader admissions logic, not separate admin.
4) Removing double keying and fragmentation
Replacing a standalone process eliminates duplication and creates a more coherent experience for both applicants and staff.
This is “practical transformation” in Crimson terms: not new complexity, just a more coherent system at exactly the moment experience matters most.
The evidence tells us that many summer school applicants are already motivated to progress to HE — so the differentiator isn’t aspiration; it’s confidence, fit, and the ability to navigate the system.
And where programmes are linked to contextual pathways and reduced offers, the operational experience is even more strategically important — because a smooth journey reinforces credibility, trust and commitment.
Summer schools are one of the few moments where universities can create real emotional connection at scale — and the admissions process into them is part of that connection.
If your university is managing summer school applications at scale — especially where programmes link to contextual offers — a quick self-check is:
If any of those answer “not consistently,” the opportunity is straightforward: join up the summer school admissions journey so it reinforces — not undermines — the student experience you’re investing in.
Blog by: Tom Cadam, Digital Transformation Director, Crimson.