UK’s Cambridge University cancels face-to-face lectures until summer 2021

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FILE PHOTO: The spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Cambridge
FILE PHOTO: Bikes are seen outside Cambridge University, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, Cambridge, Britain, April 1, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Couldridge/File Photo

May 20, 2020

CAMBRIDGE, England (Reuters) – Britain’s Cambridge University became one of the first in the world on Wednesday to announce that all its lectures would be delivered online over the next academic year because of the coronavirus outbreak.

The university, which shut its campuses to students in March after the British government introduced a strict lockdown to curb the spread of COVID-19, said lectures would be delivered virtually until summer 2021.

“All mass lectures – so really big lectures involving a lot of students – will not happen face to face but will be put online,” said Graham Virgo, Senior Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Education.

As many students as possible would return to campuses and the ‘supervision’ system of group teaching within the small colleges that make up the university would continue with social distancing regulations in place.

“It’s not going to feel like an online course, because there will be all this other education around it,” Virgo said.

The university said the decision could be reviewed depending on official guidance on dealing with the virus.

A spokeswoman for Universities UK said the Cambridge announcement appeared to be the first in the United Kingdom to apply to the whole year.

California State University, decided last week to make fall term classes virtual, one of the first in the United States to do so, amid fears of a second wave of infections.

Britain’s universities minister said earlier this month that institutions could still charge the full tuition fee of 9,250 pounds ($11,320) as long as they maintained high standards of online teaching.

Nicola Dandridge, chief executive of the university watchdog the Office for Students, told lawmakers on Monday that students needed to know what education they would be offered before they accepted places.

“What we don’t want to see are promises that it’s all going to be back to usual – an on-campus experience – when it turns out that’s not the case,” she said.

(Reporting by Michael Holden, Sarah Young, Ben Dangerfield and Will Russell; editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Philippa Fletcher)

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