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London Metropolitan University: student numbers fall | London Metropolitan University: student numbers fall |
(about 13 hours later) | |
By Luke Walton Education correspondent, BBC News | By Luke Walton Education correspondent, BBC News |
A university that lost its licence to recruit overseas students in August has also seen a sharp fall in the number of new domestic students. | |
London Metropolitan University was the first in the UK to lose the right to recruit outside the European Union. | London Metropolitan University was the first in the UK to lose the right to recruit outside the European Union. |
So far in this academic year it has less than half the number of new students it had in the previous year, figures obtained by the BBC suggest. | |
The university says the figures are only a snapshot and will improve. | The university says the figures are only a snapshot and will improve. |
Data released under a Freedom of Information request shows the number of UK and EU recruits at the university has fallen from 11,000 last year to about 6,000 this year. | |
The number of new students from outside the EU fell from 2,000 to about 300. | |
The university accepts bad headlines about the loss of its licence affected recruitment, but denies a crisis. | The university accepts bad headlines about the loss of its licence affected recruitment, but denies a crisis. |
The UK Border Agency said it took the action because the university was not making proper checks on its overseas students - that it did not keep records of whether they had the required standard of English to be given a student visa or whether they were attending lectures. | The UK Border Agency said it took the action because the university was not making proper checks on its overseas students - that it did not keep records of whether they had the required standard of English to be given a student visa or whether they were attending lectures. |
The university denies this and is challenging the action through the courts. | The university denies this and is challenging the action through the courts. |
In September, the courts gave the university a partial reprieve, allowing it to teach existing overseas students until the end of the academic year. | |
Its vice chancellor, Prof Malcolm Gillies, said the effect of the Border Agency's action had been "substantial" but that other factors were involved. | Its vice chancellor, Prof Malcolm Gillies, said the effect of the Border Agency's action had been "substantial" but that other factors were involved. |
He said the university had cut the number of courses as part of efficiency measures and last year over-enrolled, going over its student number limit, so always planned to reduce its numbers, and that it is still recruiting. | He said the university had cut the number of courses as part of efficiency measures and last year over-enrolled, going over its student number limit, so always planned to reduce its numbers, and that it is still recruiting. |
"There are students whose applications are still being processed and there are enrolments which are still hanging on what the Student Loan Company is doing," he said. | "There are students whose applications are still being processed and there are enrolments which are still hanging on what the Student Loan Company is doing," he said. |
"That's not within our control." | "That's not within our control." |
Prof Gillies said the university was "84% towards their recruitment target for domestic and EU students" for this year and had been one of the few to be given funding to increase its intake this year. | |
He said other universities had also seen a fall in numbers and that once official figures for all universities were published in December, that would be clear. | He said other universities had also seen a fall in numbers and that once official figures for all universities were published in December, that would be clear. |
He added: "We are going to the High Court. We are going to get our licence back and next year we are going to show there is still a big demand for London Met." | He added: "We are going to the High Court. We are going to get our licence back and next year we are going to show there is still a big demand for London Met." |
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