The Mail on Sunday

University takes on too many students to f it in its lecture halls

... so they are forced to watch lectures on laptops

- By Julie Henry

STUDENTS at one of Britain’s top universiti­es are being forced to watch lessons on laptops because there are too many of them to fit into lecture theatres.

Lancaster University has allowed so many first years on to its psychology course that some are being told to stay away from lectures because there is no space for them.

Instead, the undergradu­ates – each paying £9,250 a year in tuition fees – have to watch the lecture streamed on to a screen elsewhere on campus. Those allowed to attend are being selected at random.

‘They have let too many people on the course,’ said one disgruntle­d student at the university, which is ranked ninth in the UK in the latest Complete University Guide.

‘It is a very popular subject, but they know how many people they can take and they went over that.’

Institutio­ns often make more offers than they have places on the basis that some candidates will fail t o make t he required A- l evel grades, but Lancaster said the excellent results achieved by this year’s applicants meant higher levels of recruitmen­t. On average, students require A, A, B at A-level to be accepted on the psychology course.

Campus overcrowdi­ng is a growing issue due to record numbers of undergradu­ates enrolling on courses. Freshers starting last month at a number of institutio­ns have been unable to find accommodat­ion or are being housed in cramped rooms.

Larger intakes have sparked complaints of overflowin­g lectures at a number of colleges, with economics students at Surrey University forced to relocate to an Odeon cinema in 2017 to provide more seats.

Ministers have also warned of students being forced to stand at the back of overcrowde­d lecture halls taking notes on their knees.

Critics last night said that students in England, who pay some of the highest tuition fees in the world, were being exploited and should question what they were getting for their money.

It comes as lecturers at more than 60 universiti­es, including Lancaster, announced plans to strike because of a row over pay and pensions, potentiall­y disrupting the learning of thousands of students.

Universiti­es could face compensati­on claims from undergradu­ates who could be robbed of teaching time by the walkouts.

Chris McGovern, chairman of the Campaign For Real Education, said: ‘Too many universiti­es are acting more l i ke educationa­l battery farms than places of learning.

‘The admissions policy seems to be, “Pack students in and pile ’em high, because there’s money to be made”. Fat-cat university bosses have their snouts in the trough and it’s to hell with the students they are exploiting.’

A spokesman for Lancaster said a new 400-seat lecture theatre is due to open in the next academic year, adding: ‘It is true that an increase in numbers does not come without challenges. To address these, we put extra resource into our psychology labs at the start of the year, including more PCs and workspaces to increase capacity and safeguard the student experience. We are also streaming our most popular first-year lectures.’

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