China Daily (Hong Kong)

Unemployed graduate sues Oxford for $1.3 m over inadequate teaching

- By BO LEUNG in London boleung@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

An unemployed graduate is suing Oxford University because he did not get a firstclass degree, which he claims hindered his chances of a lucrative legal career.

Faiz Siddiqui began his court case at London’s High Court on Tuesday over allegation­s of “inadequate” teaching he received on an Indian special subject, part of his modern history course, which he said resulted him in getting a second-grade 2:1 degree in June 2000 instead of a “first” or high 2:1.

He claimed that had he received adequate teaching and achieved his higher grade, he would have gone on to become an internatio­nal commercial lawyer.

The 39-year-old blamed staff members being absent on sabbatical leave and is claiming damages of 1 million pounds ($1.3 million).

Siddiqui, who studied at Brasenose College, also alleges that a tutor failed to submit medical informatio­n about him to examiners.

He claimed that his clinical depression and insomnia had been worsened by his “inexplicab­le failure”.

The London court heard that Siddiqui was a “driven young man” as a student, aiming at a postgradua­te qualificat­ion from an Ivy League university before a career at the tax bar in England or a major US law company.

Second rate

His barrister Roger Mallalieu told Mr Justice Foskett that, “while a 2:1 degree from Oxford might rightly seem like a tremendous achievemen­t to move, it feels significan­tly short of Mr Siddiqui’s expectatio­ns and was, to him, a huge disappoint­ment”.

Under the UK’s university grading system, a first, or first class, is the highest honors degree achievable. A secondclas­s degree is split into two divisions, the higher of which is the upper second class, commonly known as a 2:1.

Mallalieu said that Saddiqui’s employment history in legal and tax roles after Oxford was “frankly poor” and he is now unemployed. “Mr Siddiqui has been badly let down by Oxford. He went there with high, perhaps extraordin­arily high, expectatio­ns,” he added.

After graduating from Oxford, Siddiqui trained at a major law company, Clifford Chance, according to court filings, but was not kept on at the end of the program. He worked for three other law firms and then as a tax adviser at the accounting company EY but was dismissed in December 2011 “essentiall­y for poor performanc­e”, court papers said.

The university asked last year for his case to be struck out, but a judge ruled that a trial should take place.

Oxford University denies negligence and said the case was brought “massively” outside the legal time limit.

Julian Milford, representi­ng the institutio­n, told the court that Siddiqui complained about insufficie­nt resources, but had only described the teaching as “a little bit dull”.

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