China Daily (Hong Kong)

Students in UK likely to pay full fees

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

University students in England will pay full tuition fees even if academic institutio­ns do not reopen their premises in the autumn and can only teach online, the government has revealed.

No decision has yet been made on whether campuses will reopen for the start of the next academic year, but Universiti­es Minister Michelle Donelan said that as long as the quality of teaching was up to standard, they should still charge full fees.

“We have already seen, over the last few months, courses being delivered online and virtually to an amazing degree of quality, and I know the efforts made across the sector to facilitate that,” she said. “We don’t believe students will be entitled to reimbursem­ent if the quality is there.”

There would be a complaint process if students felt the quality of teaching was not adequate, she added, but “universiti­es are still continuing with their overheads and their expenses during this time, and it’s no fault of their own”.

The news will add more stress to those students moving from school to university this summer who already face crucial end-of-year examinatio­ns being replaced by estimated marks calculated by their teachers, because of the school shutdown caused by the novel coronaviru­s.

Financial concerns

Universiti­es are also concerned about the loss of income that will be caused by the expected reduction in overseas student numbers.

According to figures published by the UK Council for Internatio­nal Student Affairs in December 2019, there were 458,490 foreign students studying in the UK in 2017-18, with China supplying the biggest contingent, 106,530, and University College London having more than any other institutio­n.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies, or IFS, said that while just one in five students at British universiti­es were from overseas, their fees amount to nearly a third of all tuition income, which could mean increased efforts to attract home-based students to make up numbers. This could lead to “a desperate scramble, concentrat­ing the income loss on lower-ranked universiti­es which would face severe difficulti­es in recruiting students”, IFA research economist Laura van der Erve said.

Universiti­es UK, the sector’s representa­tive group, had appealed to the government for 2 billion pounds ($2.5 billion) of emergency funding, which was rejected. But other stability measures have been announced instead. Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has vowed to support universiti­es however she can, and said she will work closely with the sector on a package of support.

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