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Learning from students’ industrial action complaints

Felicity Mitchell, the independent adjudicator at OAIHE, brings out common themes from a spate of complaints and responses relating to last year's industrial action.
This article is more than 5 years old

Felicity Mitchell is the Independent Adjudicator at OIA.

Last week we published a group of case summaries as a representative selection of the complaints we have reviewed about the industrial action in early 2018.

At the time we published a Briefing Note to outline the approach we would take to complaints arising from the action. There are some themes emerging from the complaints we have seen so far.

Academic disadvantage and learning disadvantage

It is good to see that providers seem to have gone to considerable lengths to make sure that their students are not disadvantaged academically. For example, providers have:

  • Removed topics from examinations;
  • Changed assessment methods;
  • Extended deadlines;
  • Changed the weighting of different module elements; and
  • Given exam boards discretion to make allowance for poor performance that appeared out of line with performance elsewhere.

But there is much more variability in how providers have approached the lost teaching and lost learning opportunities. Some have delivered missed teaching by other methods, such as videoed lectures, published lecture notes and other on-line resources, additional tutorial sessions, and allowing students to attend different seminar groups or audit the missed sessions at a later date.

Some providers appear to have done nothing to make up for lost teaching on the basis that there is no contractual obligation to provide a specific number of taught sessions. They have argued with some vigour that students have suffered no loss provided they are not academically disadvantaged. The logical conclusion of that line of argument is that it doesn’t matter what you have taught your students as long as they come out with a degree at the end of it.

We have taken the view that if a student is led to believe they will learn about a specific topic, then the provider cannot make up for failing to deliver that learning simply by not examining the student on it.

No matter how extensive a provider’s efforts to make up for lost teaching, some students will still be disadvantaged. A student with a learning disability may be disadvantaged if the assessment timetable is concertinaed, or if extensive written material is handed out to replace lectures. A part time or international student may not be able to take advantage of an offer to audit a course or attend replacement lectures.

Force majeure

It was always going to be interesting to see whether providers would be able to rely on force majeure clauses. Only two providers have sought to rely on their force majeure clauses in the complaints we have seen, and in each case we have decided it was not reasonable for them to do so. One clause was so wide that it would have allowed the provider to cancel an entire programme in the event of industrial action lasting a few days. The other clause allowed the provider to delay teaching, but the provider had not made any attempt to deliver the missed teaching late.

Some students have found it difficult to get their complaint considered by their provider. Some providers have told students that they would not consider complaints until the end of the academic year. There is some logic to this: after all – it is difficult to see how serious the impact of the lost teaching was on the student until all the mitigating measures have taken effect and the results are known. But students should at least be able to register their complaint when it arises, and in some cases complaints can be resolved much earlier.

On the other hand, some students have not made any effort to engage with the provider’s internal processes. In one case the first indication the provider had of a student’s complaint was a pre-action letter from the student’s solicitor several months after the industrial action. The provider responded saying that it would accept a complaint from the student even though they were out of time. Instead the student’s solicitors submitted a complaint to us. We decided we could not look at it because it had not been considered by the provider. It is a pity that students who have signed up for the so called “class actions” risk being disadvantaged in this way.

We anticipate that complaints will continue to trickle in for a while: students have 12 months from the end of the internal processes to complain to us.

We plan to publish a second batch of case summaries in the summer.

2 responses to “Learning from students’ industrial action complaints

  1. The thorny problem here is financial compensation for students. A commercial enterprise has owners or shareholders. They bear the costs of successful compensation claims against the enterprise. Universities have no shareholders and, with few exceptions, don’t generate large profits (or “surpluses” as our ideologically pure brethren prefer to call them). Money paid out to students in compensation claims reduces the ability of almost all Universities to provide services to the other students or to fund research or community engagement. This is a consequence of the partial marketisation of higher education – Universities are neither fish nor fowl. Far better to have agreed standards for make-up in the event of industrial action or other disruptions.

  2. There are private universities and plenty of private HE providers.

    And in this case there was unpaid salary , which was only ringfenced and spent in benevolent ways in some cases…

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