Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Students call for tuition fees to be cut in lockdown

Petition to lower costs from £9k to £3k

- By Lydia Chantler-hicks lchantlerh­icks@thekmgroup. co.uk

Thousands of Kent students are calling for tuition fees to be lowered as they are forced to once again study remotely due to the pandemic.

They have signed a petition calling for the Government to help reduce university fees from £9,250 to £3,000 - as lockdown rules mean the majority of students will be learning online until at least mid-february. It has already garnered more than 500,000 signatures, with Canterbury among areas with the highest number of signatorie­s.

Home to three universiti­es, the city has been left especially empty during the lockdown as many of its tens of thousands of students remain in their hometowns.

Louis Eaves, a second-year religion, philosophy and ethics student at Canterbury Christ Church University, says it is “ridiculous” students are being charged full price for their courses.

CCCU says its students must still pay full fees, although it is offering a rebate on rent to those who are unable to stay in their university-owned accommodat­ion due to the lockdown. Louis, 19, said: “While we understand that we still need to pay for the tuition we still get, we believe that being forced to pay the full amount is unfair. “I understand the Government has been giving out money and reductions in lots of other areas, so they are stretched as it is. “But it’s like they’re using students as a way of recouping their losses.

“Students are universall­y known for being among the poorest in society, and yet they’re the ones who are basically having to refund the country. And it shouldn’t be that way.”

Louis says he feels students have been treated as “an afterthoug­ht” since Boris Johnson failed to mention universiti­es when he announced the roll-out of a third lockdown on Monday. “It feels like the Government has basically washed their hands of us,” he said. “They’ve made concession­s for GCSES and A-levels by cancelling exams, but we’ve been given nothing.”

Louis says he feels his £9,250-a-year is being charged to “basically get a degree through Microsoft Teams and Powerpoint”.

“We shouldn’t be paying a full amount of money for facilities we can’t use,” he said. Kelly Bellerson, a final-year journalism student at Canterbury Christ Church, agrees it has been a “difficult” year for those at university. “Usually my course is quite heavily based on campus, but I haven’t seen my lecturers once in person at all this semester,” she said.

“It’s been really challengin­g. It hasn’t been a proper year of learning.”

Responding to the national petition, a spokesman for the Department for Education said: “We understand this has been a very difficult time for students, which is why we have prioritise­d their education and wellbeing from the start of this pandemic. “Universiti­es are responsibl­e for their fees, but the Government has been clear if universiti­es want to continue charging the maximum amount permitted, they are expected to maintain quality and academic standards and the quantity of tuition should not drop.

“They should seek to ensure all students, regardless of their background, can access their studies remotely.

“We know it has been a challengin­g period for the sector which is why we introduced financial support last year, including bringing forward over £2bn worth of tuition fee payments and making £280m available for research through grant funding.”

CCCU says that as it continues to support students in their studies, “there is no reduction to the published tuition fees for any year group”.

The university does add, however: “We will review our position if the Government changes its approach to tuition fees.” What do you think? Email kentishgaz­ette@thekmgroup. co.uk.

‘Students are.. among the poorest in society, and yet they’re the ones who are basically having to refund the country’

 ??  ?? Kelly Bellerson is studying multimedia journalism at Canterbury Christ Church University
Kelly Bellerson is studying multimedia journalism at Canterbury Christ Church University
 ??  ?? Student Louis Eaves
Student Louis Eaves

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