Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
International

Oxford University To Face Indian-Origin Student's Trial Over 'Appallingly Bad' Teaching Allegations

IANS, 23 Jan, 2017 11:50 AM
    In a landmark ruling, the UK Supreme Court has ordered Oxford University to stand trial after an Indian-origin student filed a 1 million pound ($1,245,100) compensation claim saying "appalling bad and boring tuition" in the varsity resulted in him getting a second class degree, a newspaper here reported.
     
    Faiz Siddiqui, a modern history graduate, says he would have enjoyed a career as a top international commercial lawyer had he not been held back for obtaining a 2:1 grade when graduating in June 2000, reported the Daily Mail on Sunday.
     
    He later trained as a solicitor, but says his life and career have been blighted by his failure to obtain a first class degree while at the university's Brasenose College.
     
    The 38-year-old is suing Oxford University saying the tuition he received was "negligent", especially on a specialist subject course on Indian imperial history during his final year.
     
    The university then applied to the high court to strike out the claim branding it "hopelessly bad" and "time barred'.
     
    But in a newly-released 18-page judgement, Justice Brian Francis Kerr ruled that the university has a case to answer and that a trial should take "as soon as possible."
     
     
    And if Siddiqui's case is successful, it could pave the way for thousands of other students to launch similar claims about universities up and down the country, with many of them charging large amount of money in tuition fees.
     
    Professor Alan Smithers, education expert at Buckingham University said: "In the past, universities have been quite cavalier about the quality of their teaching. If Siddiqui wins, it will open the door to other students who do not think they got the degree they deserved because of issues about the teaching they received."
     
    At a previous hearing, the university admitted that it had "difficulties" teaching Asian history in the year Siddiqui graduated, because more than half of the faculty teaching staff were on sabbatical leave at the same time.
     
    Siddiqui said the standard of tuition he received suffered as a result of the "intolerable" pressure the "eminent historian" was under.
     
    As a result of which, Siddiqui said he "underachieved significantly", causing his overall course grade to bomb.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide
    WASHINGTON — A feeling of dread is rippling through one particular group in the United States, as hundreds of thousands of young people fear they might have to hide in society's shadows during a Donald Trump presidency.

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action
    TORONTO — Class-action lawyers wasted little time Friday in jumping on word of a cyberattack on an Ontario casino in which sensitive information was stolen.

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court
    An Indian-origin futures trader, who was extradited to the US after being arrested in the UK for his alleged role in the 2010 Wall Street "flash crash" which wiped nearly USD 1 trillion off the value of American shares in minutes, has pleaded guilty in a court in Chicago.

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court

    British Prime Minister Theresa May Criticised At Home For Her 'Shambolic' India Visit

    Describing as "shambolic" British Prime Minister Theresa May's just-concluded visit to India, former Liberal Democrats leader Paddy Ashdown today criticised her hardline stance on immigration as "damaging" to UK's economy.

    British Prime Minister Theresa May Criticised At Home For Her 'Shambolic' India Visit

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I
    World leaders gather in Belgium on Friday to mark the 98th anniversary of the end of World War I in which 1.5 lakh Indian soldiers participated as part of the largest volunteer army in the world.

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I

    Convergence Of Views New Normal In Indo-US Ties: Envoy Richard Verma

    Convergence Of Views New Normal In Indo-US Ties: Envoy Richard Verma
    US Ambassador to India Richard Verma today reiterated that convergence of views was the "new normal" in Indo-US ties which is "based on results" and not on "rhetoric", seeking to assuage nerves in New Delhi on Donald Trump's election as President.

    Convergence Of Views New Normal In Indo-US Ties: Envoy Richard Verma