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Update on the marking and assessment boycott
Posted on behalf of: Student Communications
Last updated: Wednesday, 7 June 2023
On Tuesday 6 June, the following message was sent to all students:
You might know that, as part of a national dispute about pay and working conditions, there is a marking and assessment boycott at 146 universities across the UK, including the ÈÕº«ÎÞÂë.
While the University respects union members’ right to take industrial action, we are doing everything possible to minimise the impact on you and your studies while also maintaining academic standards.
How will the boycott impact me?
The boycott means that while all your exams and assessments will be marked, in some cases this will take longer than usual. Some exams and assessments might not be marked until the boycott ends. Please see below a breakdown of how the boycott could impact you:
Finalists
Finalists will fall into one of three groups:
- Students who are unaffected by the boycott.
- Some students will have some missing marks. Many of these students will be awarded a temporary ‘ordinary’ degree this summer. Once the boycott ends all exams and assessments will be marked and, subject to these marks, ordinary degrees will be converted to classified honours degrees.
- Some students will have too many missing marks to be awarded an ordinary degree during the boycott. Once the boycott ends all exams and assessments will be marked and, subject to these marks, students will receive a classified honours degrees.