Skip to Content
menu

London: Foreign students come to Britain expecting good degrees in return for their fees, a university watchdog warned on Tuesday.

The head of the Quality Assurance Agency, which oversees standards at academic institutions, said many fee-paying foreign students had to be told that handing over money was no guarantee of educational success.

Peter Williams told the BBC: "There is a belief from some overseas students that if they pay their fees, they will get a degree. We have to make clear that does not operate here."

He warned that the use of agents to recruit overseas students could mean lowering standards.

Williams also spoke out about problems in the classification of degrees, saying they were "arbitrary and unreliable".

Doubts about the consistency of students' assessments, continuing difficulties with degree classification and "departures from institutional practice" have been exposed in a report by the agency.

Drawing on 59 audit reports of universities and higher education institutions in England and Northern Ireland, the report said: "Critical recommendations outweigh identifiable good practice in the audit reports. Worries include doubts in some cases about the double-marking and/or moderation of students' assessments."

The report also highlights "continuing difficulties with degree classification; departures from institutional practice in the way staff in departments and schools work with external examiners; and generally weak use of statistical data to monitor and quality assure the assessments of all students and degree classifications".

The report also finds weaknesses in the arrangements of some institutions for detecting and dealing with plagiarism and for providing feedback on students' assessed work, and this includes giving feedback to international students.

Page last updated 01 January 2020