![]() Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, Sep 12, 2006 ePaper |
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International
James Meikle
London: Thousands of undergraduate students in the U.K. are being forced to sign good behaviour contracts with their universities and warned they could be expelled if they breach regulations. The contracts put the onus on students to attend lectures and tutorials, but have been condemned by the U.K.'s National Union of Students. It claims the contracts are "one-sided," and do not spell out what standard of teaching students should expect to get for the £3,000-a-year top-up tuition fees they are being charged. Oxford and Chester Universities have introduced the contracts for students this year and legal agreements are already in place at Bristol and Nottingham Trent. The NUS believes it is the start of a disturbing trend that could be adopted by other universities. At Oxford, which already makes such demands of its postgraduates, students must sign a document saying any breach of regulations or codes of practice about their conduct, studies and residences "may lead to your expulsion from the university or other sanctions." Chester University says new undergraduates have an obligation to "study diligently, and to attend promptly and participate appropriately at lectures, courses, classes, seminars, tutorials, work placements and other activities which form part of the programme as required..." The document also says academic courses differ widely "and the university does not therefore specify any minimum amount of teaching which you will receive..." The executive of the NUS is challenging what it sees as a piecemeal, university-by-university process. It will oppose any arrangements not agreed with students and is calling for a debate over the obligations on all sides in an era when most undergraduates in England must use loans to fund their fees. Three years ago, a Wolverhampton University law student received £30,000 in an out-of-court deal after claiming the course had not lived up to the prospectus. Wes Streeting, the NUS' vice president for education, said: "Vice- Chancellors and Principals are very busy protecting themselves from the customers they have created in a system they have been fighting for. It is absurd." Contracts so far contain get-out clauses allowing universities to change the way courses are taught because of cuts, the need for institutional "efficiency" or changes in educational practice, as long as the alterations are "reasonable." © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
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