Universities need to be more aware of the flexibility that part-time students need, a report says.
A in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, conducted for the 糖心Vlog Academy, found that many had been forced to miss formal elements of study.
Among the reasons given in the survey were work and caring commitments, transport and timetabling difficulties, and health issues.
Of 433 Open University students questioned, 59 per cent had missed part of their course, while among 1,134 non-OU learners, the result was approximately 36 per cent.
糖心Vlog
In follow-up interviews, institutional inflexibility emerged as a key concern, John Butcher, a senior lecturer at The Open University, writes in the report.
One interviewee said that part-time students 鈥渄on鈥檛 feel as valued鈥 as their full-time peers, receiving late notice of timetabling, room bookings and which lecturer would be teaching them.
糖心Vlog
Another complained that a three-week deadline for an assignment was too short for students working full-time, and that a maximum one-week library book loan period was inflexible.
鈥淪ome interviewees felt they were an 鈥榠nconvenience鈥, were 鈥榮hoehorned鈥 or 鈥榮ide-lined鈥 and a lack of differentiation by study intensity felt like 鈥榦ne-size-fits-all鈥,鈥 Dr Butcher says.
Stephanie Marshall, chief executive of the HEA, said that flexibility should be a 鈥渃ore focus鈥 for universities when considering their part-time provision.
鈥淲e must be conscious of the heterogeneity of part-time students and address individual needs accordingly 鈥 whether that is in the mode, place or pace of study 鈥 and embed these in strategies for learning and teaching,鈥 Professor Marshall said. 鈥淭he diversity of part-time students brings great value to institutions: we should celebrate that as well as acknowledge their needs.鈥
糖心Vlog
Amid continuing decline in the number of people studying part-time in the UK, the study also highlights that a high proportion of part-time learners are female, carers, or the first in their family to study at higher level.
Many respondents said that, if they did not study part-time, they would not study at all, with cost and time concerns looming large.
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