Britain’s universities refund tuition fees to nearly 1,000 students in two years over complaints of poor value-for-money

  • Some universities settle with students who say the course isn’t up to standard
  • Almost 1,000 students have had tuition fees refunded in the past two years alone
  • Students pay tuition fees of £9,250 a year compared with just £3,000 in 2006 
  • Critics said students were waking up to the ‘scandal’ of poor-quality courses

Universities have admitted refunding tuition fees to almost 1,000 students in the past two years over complaints of poor value for money.

Students pay fees of £9,250 a year – compared with just £3,000 in 2006 – and many are dissatisfied with the quality of education they are getting in return.

Universities often promote courses with promises of glamorous career paths and sparkling facilities – but find it hard to deliver. 

Teesside University saw £56,650 paid out to 23 students, some of whom complained about their MSc courses. The University of Leicester paid £27,928 in compensation to 18 students [File photo]

Students received at least 978 payouts totalling more than £750,000 in the past two years, according to figures from institutions across the country.

Critics yesterday said students were finally waking up to the ‘huge scandal’ of poor-quality courses which may leave them ‘underemployed’.

Examples included a student at the University of Oxford who was paid £15,252 after they complained their supervisor had left and not been adequately replaced.

And at the Royal Veterinary College, £3,450 was paid to a student who complained about the quality of teaching and supervision for a research project.

Universities often promote courses with promises of glamorous career paths and sparkling facilities – but find it hard to deliver [File photo]

Freedom of Information figures given to the Mail uncovered dozens of cases where universities settled claims with students who said the course was not up to standard.

Some complaints were directed at lecturers, while in others, students said the course had been mis-sold to them or elements changed after they were enrolled.

The total amount paid out is likely to be underestimated, as some universities failed to provide information and others refused to give exact numbers of compensation payouts, hiding behind data protection laws. 

Teesside University saw £56,650 paid out to 23 students, some of whom complained about their MSc courses. The University of Leicester paid £27,928 in compensation to 18 students.

Brunel University made 17 payments with a combined value of £22,250, and Kingston University paid out £14,048 to 27 students, the vast majority of whom had successfully complained about a Geology BSc course.

Christopher McGovern, of the Campaign for Real Education, said: ‘Too many universities are running a money-making racket that needs to be exposed and challenged.’ 

He said graduates are being ‘let down’, whereas university bosses are ‘swanning around on massive salaries’.

A Universities UK spokesman said it was ‘right that students are compensated if it is found that the quality of their course does not meet the high standards which universities rightly aim for’. 

It is understood the vast majority of payouts at all the universities were made in out-of-court settlements.

And it emerged yesterday that UUK is urging higher education institutions to put ‘value for money statements’ about how they spend their income in prospectuses, according to the i newspaper.

Students pay fees of £9,250 a year – compared with just £3,000 in 2006 – and many are dissatisfied with the quality of education they are getting in return [File photo]

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