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Complaints by students rise 25% | Complaints by students rise 25% |
(2 days later) | |
Complaints by students against their universities have risen for a third year, the adjudicator has reported. | Complaints by students against their universities have risen for a third year, the adjudicator has reported. |
Almost two-thirds were about academic results, according to the Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education in England and Wales (OIA). | Almost two-thirds were about academic results, according to the Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education in England and Wales (OIA). |
And 64% of the complainants were mature students - aged over 25 - while more than a third were postgraduates. | And 64% of the complainants were mature students - aged over 25 - while more than a third were postgraduates. |
The OIA conference next week will call on universities to cater better for the new, older student population. | The OIA conference next week will call on universities to cater better for the new, older student population. |
There are also quite a few solicitors' firms around, backed by legal aid, who are only too ready to represent students Baroness Deech | |
The adjudicator, Ruth Deech, said the complainants reflected the changing makeup of the student body: more graduates and older students, more from non-traditional backgrounds, more with English as a second language, more with disabilities or with caring responsibilities. | |
"You can't reduce conflict over grades. We don't interfere with academic judgements and I think it's important for British academic institutions to keep upholding their high standards," she told the BBC News website. | "You can't reduce conflict over grades. We don't interfere with academic judgements and I think it's important for British academic institutions to keep upholding their high standards," she told the BBC News website. |
Lawyers | Lawyers |
But other areas of complaint might be reduced by adopting US or Australian-style campus ombudsmen, she said. | But other areas of complaint might be reduced by adopting US or Australian-style campus ombudsmen, she said. |
"Somebody with an open door who can listen informally to students' concerns and who also has the capacity to access university authorities." | "Somebody with an open door who can listen informally to students' concerns and who also has the capacity to access university authorities." |
She did not want a rise in complaints to her office - which takes up issues when universities' internal processes have failed. | She did not want a rise in complaints to her office - which takes up issues when universities' internal processes have failed. |
Part of the reason for the increase in friction was students' desire for "value for money" in a time of higher fees - sometimes backed by the parents who are paying them. | Part of the reason for the increase in friction was students' desire for "value for money" in a time of higher fees - sometimes backed by the parents who are paying them. |
This went hand in hand with the perception that employers would not consider them unless they had upper second or first class degrees. | This went hand in hand with the perception that employers would not consider them unless they had upper second or first class degrees. |
And increasingly the "litigation culture" was in evidence, Baroness Deech said. | And increasingly the "litigation culture" was in evidence, Baroness Deech said. |
"There are also quite a few solicitors' firms around, backed by legal aid, who are only too ready to represent students," she said. | "There are also quite a few solicitors' firms around, backed by legal aid, who are only too ready to represent students," she said. |
"There are some firms we see a lot of. We keep saying you don't need a lawyer, to complain to us, and yet quite a few of them do have lawyers." | "There are some firms we see a lot of. We keep saying you don't need a lawyer, to complain to us, and yet quite a few of them do have lawyers." |
Compensation | Compensation |
| In 2007 applications to the OIA rose by 25% compared with 2006, from 586 to 734.
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Six hundred of the complaints were deemed eligible for consideration of which 26% were upheld to some extent - up from 19% in 2006. | Six hundred of the complaints were deemed eligible for consideration of which 26% were upheld to some extent - up from 19% in 2006. |
The adjudicator recommended that a total of £173,000 in compensation should be paid to the complainants. | The adjudicator recommended that a total of £173,000 in compensation should be paid to the complainants. |
The OIA was set up in 2004 to review student complaints from the 146 universities in England and Wales. | The OIA was set up in 2004 to review student complaints from the 146 universities in England and Wales. |