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Hundreds of students are isolating in university accommodation including at Glasgow University
The culture secretary has defended students going back to university in England saying there were “clear guidelines” on coronavirus in place.
Oliver Dowden told the Andrew Marr show it was important students did not “give up a year of their life” by not going.
Labour has called on the government to consider pausing the return after Covid outbreaks meant thousands of students had to isolate in their accommodation.
A scientist who advises the government said the situation was “inevitable”.
Mr Dowden said: “Young people have paid a huge price during this crisis and I think it is only fair to try and get them back – we have got clear guidelines for them to follow.”
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Prof Mark Woolhouse, who sits on the government’s pandemic modelling group SPI-M, said the situation was “entirely predictable” and had been modelled.
He said students were not to blame for the outbreaks and with students converging from around the country it was “inevitable there would be some spread”.
Modelling showed the risk areas were first year halls of residence and face-to-face teaching, he said.
Students have been told to isolate in their accommodation at several universities in England and Scotland, including at Manchester Metropolitan University – where students said they were being prevented from leaving by security guards and police.
Ellie Jackson, a first year student at Manchester Met, said: “We knew it would be different but we didn’t think it would be this different.
“We’ve been told, if we leave, we can’t come back.”
Fellow student Jaimick Shah said his flatmates had all tested negative but still had to isolate. “We’re struggling to get food because everyone is trying to order it at the same time,” he said.
Manchester Met said it had communicated with students “as soon as we could but it was not possible to give significant advanced notice due to the requirement to implement the isolation almost immediately”.
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Mr Dowden said students’ experience at the start of this term was “not as it would be” due to the crisis, but that students should still pay tuition fees as they were being taught.
Asked by Andrew Marr if students should get their fees back, Mr Lammy said: “Look it’s clear that there are actually lots of universities struggling financially so there’s a balance here to be struck. Many of us have gone online, the key now is to get students online successfully and for them to have face-to-face [tuition] where it is safe to do so.”
He called for Education Secretary Gavin Williamson to explain his plan to the House of Commons on Monday.
Labour’s shadow education secretary Kate Green told BBC Breakfast the government should consider pausing the start of term while an “effective, efficient testing system” was put in place, with students given a choice of learning from home if they felt safer there.
Thousands more students in England are turning up for the new university term this weekend – but the big question is whether they should be heading in the opposite direction and studying from home.
Is it wise or fair for universities to bring students back if they’re at increasing risk of being in a Covid outbreak and having to self-isolate?
Accommodation blocks, with shared facilities and filled with young people wanting to socialise, have already seen a wave of outbreaks. So should the brakes be applied to stop this pattern repeating itself?
After recruiting record numbers of students and promising them a mix of online and face-to-face teaching, it would be a very awkward U-turn for universities to switch back to the academic equivalent of working from home.
And would that mean refunds on accommodation and tuition fees?
There are likely to be some chaotic days ahead – and some big decisions to be made about whether to cut numbers on campus. And students must wonder how they’ve gone from being cooped up at home all summer to now being cooped up in university.
In Scotland there are outbreaks at the University of Glasgow, where 600 students have been isolating, as well as at universities in Dundee, Edinburgh and Aberdeen.
Scotland’s Education Secretary John Swinney told the BBC’s Politics Scotland programme students – even those who tested negative for Covid-19 – should stay in their accommodation to minimise the spread of the virus.
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