Glasgow Times

Calls to keep EU options for students after Brexit

- BY DREW SANDELANDS

THE UK Government must ensure Glasgow students can continue to study abroad after Brexit, universiti­es say.

Tory MPs voted down an amendment to the Withdrawal Agreement Bill which would have required the UK Government to seek continued participat­ion in Erasmus+, an EU programme which allows students to learn at universiti­es abroad.

Glasgow universiti­es say leaving the scheme would be “hugely detrimenta­l” to students, who “really value the opportunit­ies”.

And Glasgow’s economic strategy, for 2016 to 2023, drawn up by the city council and Chamber of Commerce, states “any diminution of Scotland’s engagement” in Erasmus will “impact negatively on the higher education sector”.

Despite the vote, the Department for Education insists the government is “committed” to continuing academic relationsh­ips between the UK and the EU, including through Erasmus “if it is in our interests to do so”.

Tory MP Chris Skidmore, the universiti­es minister, said the amendment was “game-playing” by opposition MPs.

He said: “We remain open to participat­ion and this will be part of future negotiatio­ns with the EU.”

Applicatio­ns for Erasmus in 2020 are not affected by the vote. The next Erasmus programme runs from 2021 to 2027.

Rachel Sandison, vice-principal for external relations at the University of Glasgow, said the rejected amendment “does not necessaril­y mean that the UK Government will not continue to associate itself to this programme”.

She said: “Negotiatio­ns on access to the Erasmus programme cannot start until the content and budget for Erasmus have been finalised in Brussels.

“The University of Glasgow – alongside other universiti­es – will continue to lobby the government for continued participat­ion in Erasmus.

“If we were no longer to participat­e in Erasmus it would be hugely detrimenta­l to our students who would lose a valuable and in-demand opportunit­y.”

The university is urging the UK Government to negotiate continued participat­ion or “establish a new national scheme to support our internatio­nal agenda and provide funded student mobility opportunit­ies”.

A Universiti­es Scotland spokespers­on said: “We are pleased the universiti­es minister has confirmed the government is still open to participat­ion.

“Universiti­es and our students really value the opportunit­ies that Erasmus offers.”

They said the country’s economy benefits “as graduates bring back wider cultural awareness, global skills and networks”.

“The Erasmus scheme is set to expand further this decade which presents opportunit­ies for member countries,” the spokespers­on added.

“We do not want Scots to miss out on this.

“The UK Government must commit to continued study-abroad funding, either through full associatio­n to the Erasmus programme or through a replacemen­t scheme.”

Over 2500 people at Scottish universiti­es worked or studied abroad through Erasmus in 2016/17.

A Department for Education spokespers­on said: “As we enter negotiatio­ns with the EU, we want to ensure that UK and European students can continue to benefit from each other’s world-leading education systems.”

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 ??  ?? Universiti­es minister Chris Skidmore said opponents were ‘game-playing’
Universiti­es minister Chris Skidmore said opponents were ‘game-playing’

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