As everyone in Yorkshire knows, you don鈥檛 get owt (anything) for nowt (nothing). Yet in the student districts around a certain Yorkshire university 30聽years ago, it felt more like you got nowt for owt. The bedsits rented to students by local landlords聽were routinely damp, freezing and easy pickings for burglars. They also felt very expensive 鈥 although 拢26 a聽week takes on rather different proportions in retrospect.
Still, if the term 鈥渟tudent experience鈥 had existed then, living with fellow students in accommodation that middle-class parents hesitated even to enter would certainly have been cited as a core part of聽it. And few were keen to move into the more salubrious but spartan, characterless university flats.
Since then, mushrooming student numbers have brought another player into the market: property developers. But while their 鈥渆n聽suite as standard鈥 offerings are another step up in quality, they come at a certain cost.
This was illustrated last year, when University of Portsmouth students were told only days before the start of the academic year that they would not be able to move into a developer鈥檚 new block because it wasn鈥檛 finished. The university鈥檚 vice-chancellor, Graham Galbraith, for new regulations to be introduced to hold developers (whose accommodation is, on average, 22聽per cent more expensive than university-provided blocks) to account. After all, he noted, accommodation affects 鈥渢he student experience and mental health, the cost and value for money of universities, and the impact of institutions on their local area鈥.
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There are several things to say about this in light of recent UK political developments. One is to note a certain amount of backsliding on universities鈥 part about whether the student experience really does include residence. Student demands for refunds to compensate for campus shutdowns amid the pandemic have been brushed off on the ground that tuition has still been provided online. Yet as Maria Magdalena Gajewska, a prospective PhD candidate, wrote in a blog 辫耻产濒颈蝉丑别诲听产测听探花视频 earlier this week, when lectures were cancelled in 2018聽because of industrial action, universities also refused refunds on the ground that, as she puts it, 鈥測ou are not paying just for your teaching; you are paying for the university experience鈥.
Then there is the repeated questioning by the government of the value for money offered by some courses and institutions and the 鈥迟别补谤颈苍驳听耻辫鈥 of Tony Blair鈥檚 50聽per cent participation target. The universities minister, Michelle Donelan, said just last week that to worry about disadvantaged students鈥 access to university is to focus on 鈥渢he wrong question鈥; the important issue is to make sure 鈥渢hat those groups that do go [on to higher study] complete, that [courses] lead to graduate jobs, but also looking at what鈥檚 in that student鈥檚 best interests鈥e don鈥檛 necessarily want everybody to go to university.鈥
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Such comments have been interpreted by some as throwing a wet blanket on working-class aspiration 鈥 ironically, in response to anti-university feeling among the Conservatives鈥 new northern working-class voters.
Clearly there have always been class issues in higher education. Young people growing up in those inner-city Yorkshire districts where students congregated 30 years ago would have had no thought of going to university. Now at least some of them do 鈥 but they are still disproportionately likely to attend a . Partly, no doubt, that is so they can save costs by living at home 鈥 although, Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, the evidence suggests that such 鈥渃ommuter students鈥 often lose out on the full 鈥渆xperience鈥 and are less likely to succeed academically.
If we are really concerned about value for money, then surely the cost of accommodation is as relevant as the cost of degrees. And while UK students largely pay the same for their tuition, those accommodation costs vary enormously according to city, district and type of landlord, rivalling or even outstripping tuition fees in some cases (as well as exceeding the maximum permitted maintenance loan).
Living costs might聽well be kept down if 鈥渓ocal or national government built student accommodation themselves or in partnership with universities鈥, as Galbraith suggests. But the government seems keener on redirecting some students to local, non-boarding further education colleges.
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The alternative, perhaps, might be to learn from the lockdown and start to wean the UK off what Hillman calls the 鈥溾 of university, allowing students also to study online from home 鈥 a dual track that some universities are already implementing amid the ongoing pandemic, particularly for international students.
Virtual students would, of course, miss out on some opportunities on campus 鈥 where the more affluent students would doubtless continue to congregate, opening up another class divide. But if online attendance became mainstream, many virtual students鈥 school friends would still live at home too, so they wouldn鈥檛 want for social interaction.
Would this be as good as boarding with friends? Perhaps not. But if value for money really means minimising cost, then it might be a better, more socially mobile alternative to further education. When it comes to higher education, is owt is better than nowt?
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Print headline: Don鈥檛 discount cost of digs
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