Students at English universities should not be subjected to specific additional lockdown measures and the government aims to ensure that all of them can return home for Christmas, though some may be required to self-isolate first, the education secretary has said.
Gavin Williamson ā who has been criticised by Labour as an āinvisible manā during the Covid crisis hitting higher education ā delivered a statement to the House of Commons on 29 September on the return of students to campuses.
Thousands of students have been ordered to self-isolate and confined to their residences as coronavirus infections have spread through student accommodation.
Mr Williamson said: āI do not believe that we should look to inflict stricter measures on students or expect higher standards of studentsā¦than we would for any other section of society. There must be a parity.ā
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Following health secretary Matt Hancockās refusal to guarantee that all students would be allowed to return home for the Christmas holidays, Mr Williamson said: āWe are going to work with universities to ensure all students are supported to return home safely and spend Christmas with their loved ones if they choose to do so.ā
He added: āWhere there are specific circumstances that warrant it, there may be a requirement for some students to self-isolate at the end of term. And we will be working with the sector to ensure this is possible, including ending in-person teaching early if that is deemed to be necessary.ā
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The Department for Education will shortly publish guidance āso that every student will be able to spend Christmas with their familyā, he continued.
Mr Williamson said that āthe decision to keep universities openā¦has been the result of an enormous team effort throughout the university and higher education sectorā.
Mr Williamson aimed to justify the governmentās decision to allow universities to reopen: āWe will not condemn a generation of young people by asking them to put their lives on hold for months or years ahead. We believe that universities are very well prepared to handle any outbreaks as they arise.ā
Face-to-face teaching would continue where needed āwherever possible as part of a blended learning approachā, said Mr Williamson, rejecting calls from some quarters to move online only.
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The DfEās HE taskforce had worked with universities and the department had provided public health guidance to institutions, he continued.
On testing, he said that the DfE was āworking withā the Department of Health āto ensure the testing capacity is sufficient for universitiesā.
He also said that universities were āable to call on Ā£256 million provided by the government for hardship funding for students who have to isolateā ā which appears to be a reference to existing funding for student access and retention.
Kate Green, Labourās shadow education secretary, told the Commons in response: āThe crisis now threatening our universities was predictable ā and it was predicted.ā
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She said the education secretary had offered nothing new on testing ā warning that some universities were having to find their own tests ā and had offered āno plan to ensure the future of our universitiesā.
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