糖心Vlog

Manchester economics students withhold NSS cooperation over curriculum demands

Post-Crash Economics Society campaigners threaten negative feedback in National Student Survey in bid to be offered alternative course modules

Published on
March 27, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Alamy

Crash course: society is lobbying for a new economics module to be taught

A group of students at the University of Manchester is hoping to force through changes to the institution鈥檚 economics curriculum by threatening to give it negative feedback on the National Student Survey.

The Post-Crash Economics Society has been campaigning for economics courses at Manchester to give more prominence to alternative theories following the 2008 financial crash. It is now urging students to not fill in the NSS until the university makes a decision regarding Bubbles, Panics and Crashes, a module that the society wants to be offered for credit on undergraduate courses from next year.

A post on the society鈥檚 Facebook page calls on 鈥渁ll third year students to hold fire on filling in their NSS鈥 until a decision is reached.

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鈥淣SS is designed to point out to the university where its failings in undergraduate teaching lie,鈥 the post continues. 鈥淚f [the university] decides to accept this course as a module it will be demonstrating its dedication to its students and its ability to listen, recognise its failures and respond to the world around it鈥f it rejects this module the opposite will be true.

鈥淲e believe that the result of this decision should have a bearing on how we rate the university in the NSS.鈥

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Joe Earle, campaign coordinator at the society, told 糖心Vlog that urging students to make their voice heard through the NSS was a legitimate way to influence the university.

He said that the society had collected 245 signatures from economics students at Manchester who want the new module to be accredited, but he believed that the university would take the threat to NSS scores more seriously.

鈥淭he university is very keen to get students to fill out the NSS, saying that they take their feedback very seriously 鈥 but this approach does not always seem to translate to non-NSS forms of feedback, like our petition, which is quite sad,鈥 he said.

A spokesman for the University of Manchester said that the society was 鈥渓eading a national debate on the way economics is taught in higher education鈥 and that the ensuing discussions had been 鈥減ositive, useful and informative鈥.

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鈥淲e urge all students to complete the NSS in the allotted time,鈥 he added. 鈥淲e take the NSS very seriously, as it is a key way for us to identify those areas that we need to improve upon, so that we may fully meet the needs of our students now and in the future.鈥

chris.parr@tsleducation.com

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