Audio By Carbonatix
The University of Cambridge is planning to keep lectures online for the entire 2020-2021 academic year due to the coronavirus, becoming the first globally-known university to announce plans beyond only the fall term.
According to a story in The Guardian newspaper, a university spokesman said: “Given that it is likely that social distancing will continue to be required, the university has decided there will be no face-to-face lectures during the next academic year.”
The university said that while lectures would continue virtually until summer 2021, smaller, in-person teaching groups may take place if it “conforms to social-distancing requirements.”
In March, Cambridge pivoted from in-person classes to online, and exams are being taken virtually.
The higher education sector globally is currently weighing concerns over the safety of students and faculty should campuses reopen this fall against substantial financial losses should doors remain shut.
Already, enrollments are expected to decline, with a drop in international student numbers in particular a concern for UK higher education institutions.
In recent years, the number of students from China enrolled at UK universities had increased significantly, creating a considerable revenue stream as international students pay higher tuition fees than domestic students.
In contrast, the University of Notre Dame in Indiana announced Monday it would welcome students back to campus on August 10, two weeks earlier than originally planned.
In addition, the university cancelled fall break and will end the semester before Thanksgiving, in late November.
Latest Stories
-
Benatia leaves Marseille amid ‘growing dissatisfaction’
38 minutes -
Captain Van Dijk wants ‘so important’ Salah to stay
47 minutes -
SMS must deliver in 5 seconds – NCA issues new mobile service targets
57 minutes -
NCA orders telcos to extend network coverage beyond district capitals
1 hour -
African Union summit clouded by Saudi-UAE rivalry in Horn of Africa
2 hours -
No more excuses – NCA rolls out stricter mobile service standards
2 hours -
Call drops must fall below 1% – NCA raises bar for telcos
2 hours -
China to implement zero tariffs on imports from 53 African countries
4 hours -
Tunisian police detain opposition figure Olfa Hamdi at airport
5 hours -
US deports 9 to Cameroon despite court protections, NYT says
5 hours -
Mali renews Barrick Mining’s Loulo license for 10 more years
5 hours -
Gender pay gap won’t close for another 30 years, warns UK trade unions group
5 hours -
No free pass for internet platforms on child safety, Starmer says
5 hours -
Andrew’s time as trade envoy should be investigated, says Vince Cable
5 hours -
‘Trump will be gone in three years’: Top Democrats try to reassure Europe
6 hours
