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UK Students Protest Biometric Scanner Move

Presto Vivace writes that the UK's Newcastle University is instituting a finger-print based attendance system. From the linked article: "University students may have to scan their fingerprints in future — to prove they are not bunking off lectures. ... Newcastle Free Education Network has organised protests against the plans, claiming the scanners would 'turn universities into border checkpoints' and 'reduce university to the attendance of lectures alone.'" The system is supposed to bring the university "in line with the UK Border Agency (UKBA) and clamp down on illegal immigrants."

196 comments

  1. Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Gotta have people coming over to do the jobs you don't want to at wages you won't work for. But we can't have them getting an education.

    1. Re:Smart but not too smart by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I think the idea is to have them do the menial jobs. If they get an education they'll take the good jobs.

    2. Re:Smart but not too smart by 1s44c · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Gotta have people coming over to do the jobs you don't want to at wages you won't work for. But we can't have them getting an education.

      This isn't to keep people out of education, it's to ensure those that signed on for a course as I requirement of getting a visa do turn up.

      Student visas are currently the easiest type of visa's to get for the UK. Once students (over)stay for 5 years they can apply for a permanent visa and in many cases claim benefits.

    3. Re:Smart but not too smart by xelah · · Score: 1

      The UK is a big exporter of education, and has some of the best universities in the world (unlike most of Europe). This isn't the same group as economic migrants or asylum seekers, and most will have no desire to stay. (Not counting, of course, sham colleges....which the University of Newcastle certainly isn't). Unfortunately, immigration paranoia is putting people off. It's always the best qualified and people you most want who get put off most easily, not the desperate with few options. The whole thing risks doing great harm to the UK education industry.

    4. Re:Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      /me blows a cloud of pot smoke in your direction.

      go fuck yourself

    5. Re:Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Student visas are currently the easiest type of visa's"

      Couldn't decide which was right, so you did it both ways? You were right the first time - no apostrophe.

    6. Re:Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Once students (over)stay for 5 years they can apply for a permanent visa and in many cases claim benefits.

      As a student in UK on Tier-4 visa, please let me assure you that this is pure bullshit! You won't get any permanent residency status here just based on study visas, even if you stay for 8-9 years. You need to get a work visa and only then your presence here will be counted toward those 5 years (to get 'leave to remain'). Getting a work visa is not easy and it has get harder since the recent changes in regulations.

    7. Re:Smart but not too smart by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      Uhhh, the reverse... We want them coming over to take education and paying us tens of thousands of pounds. We don't want them coming over and taking low end jobs that some of our unemployed could take.

    8. Re:Smart but not too smart by JakeBurn · · Score: 1

      A free education you mean. Why should anyone be allowed to sneak in for free if others have to pay?

    9. Re:Smart but not too smart by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Actually it's the opposite.

      Generally if a UK collage or university is prepared to take you the government will give you a visa to come and study. The government is quite happy to have people from across the world buy education from us.

      However in recent years there has been a scandal surrounding abuse of these visas. People would sign up for an educational institution (often but not always a sham collage that existed for the purpose) get a student visa and come to the UK but rather than actually studying they go and find illegal work. For a visa abuser student visas had the advantage over tourist visas that a student can legitimately stay in the country for a long time so someone abusing a student visa could come and go from the country without arousing suspicion.

      The result has been a government clampdown. Educational institutions are now required to keep track of non-EU students and report those who fail to attend to the border agency (who I presume will cancel the visa). Educational institutions which fail to do this can lose the ability to sponsor visas for non-EU students and hence practically speaking lose the ability to take them. For a typical UK university losing the ability to take non-EU students would be a MASSIVE financial blow and it would not surprise me if for some universities it led to bankruptcy. London Metropolitan University got caught up in this and has come very close to losing the ability to take foreign students, apparently they have won a reprieve for now but the threat is very real http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2012/sep/21/london-metropolitan-university-reprieve-student-visa .

      This is the first i've heard of a university using biometrics to keep tabs on students though. The impression I got from the unveristy i'm at was that checking student ID cards was considered sufficient.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    10. Re:Smart but not too smart by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a good plan. I recommend its application to all elected officials first for the testing phase.

    11. Re:Smart but not too smart by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I was planning on coming to the UK, but the rules changed, eliminating the skilled worker points system (I landed in another commonwealth country instead, who still had the same system). If I'd known it was ending, I could have gotten in before it closed. If it is ever re-opened, I'll probably apply. Collecting citizenships. US now, Australia in a couple years, and somewhere in the EU after. All bases covered for the economic or zombie apocalypse.

    12. Re:Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UK is a big exporter of education, and has some of the best universities in the world ...

      And, I was led to believe, a great tradition of voluntary lecture attendance.

      Surely periodic assessment would be more reliable indicator of participation than fingerprint scans? One of my Biochem lecturers (Sydney University) began his lecture series with this advice: "You need to realise, we only put these lectures on for your comic relief ... the real work you do is over there in the library." It was an undergrad course. For grads, of course, the real work is done in the lab.

    13. Re:Smart but not too smart by Kentari · · Score: 1

      You intend to fight zombies with passports? To give them papercuts? Bundle them together and make a brick out of it?

    14. Re:Smart but not too smart by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      "Student visas are currently the easiest type of visa's"

      Couldn't decide which was right, so you did it both ways? You were right the first time - no apostrophe.

      Get back under your bridge before the daylight turns you to stone you nasty grammar troll.

    15. Re:Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sell kebabs with your uncle and stay forever.

      Or better still, just piss off and take your family with you.

    16. Re:Smart but not too smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sell kebabs with your uncle and stay forever.

      Or better still, just piss off and take your family with you.

      What is it about koreans and our kebab making skills that gets a response like this ?

    17. Re:Smart but not too smart by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Nah, having Australia passport lets you in OZ and NZ, and UK lets you in UK and Ireland. I'll have covered all the major English-speaking islands. Being a citizen of all of them will entitle me to entry above the nameless refugees (who are likely infected anyway).

  2. Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Puls4r · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I spent my first two years of calculus lectures sleeping in. I scored near perfect in both classes. WHY do people have to be at lectures they don't need, again? It's the university's stupid rules that don't allow me to just test out of the classes: they've got to have their money. But why would they want me sitting in a lecture distracting other people while I surf youtube?

    1. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Xugumad · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you're at the university on a visa, there's an expectation you're attending the university. Don't laugh, it happens.

      If the UKBA feels the university isn't doing enough, this happens: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-19425718

    2. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by spire3661 · · Score: 2

      Cant you jsut sit there without having to watch TV? Some asshole in the front of my last IT class would watch fucking live basketball until i told him to knock it off.

      --
      Good-bye
    3. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know, right? The live sports playing on the laptop screen in front of you must have distracted the hell out of you while you were posting to Slashdot during the lecture.

      Don't fucking pretend you weren't.

    4. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why don't you mind your own business? Unless the guy was part of your group and lagging behind in his share of the work, what he does during class is none of your fucking business, you little brown-nosed snitch.

      The least anyone who wants to watch TV on their laptop can do is sit in the back of the class. Motion is distracting. If it wasn't you'd have been hit by a bus already.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by spire3661 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem was not that he was watching TV, but rather watch such a high motion source that it was impossible to not be distracted by it. I told him and he complied, end of story. If you wanted to escalate it to physical violence i would have had you arrested by campus security. I have every right to speak to another human being about his behavior, you have no right to assault another human.

      --
      Good-bye
    6. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by spire3661 · · Score: 2

      Posting this as AC is like an army of kettles calling the pot black........

      --
      Good-bye
    7. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      I spent my first two years of calculus lectures sleeping in. I scored near perfect in both classes. WHY do people have to be at lectures they don't need, again?

      And how do you prove you don't need the lectures? Sit an exam every week on what's been taught so far? For every one who's lucky enough to get away with it, how many more are wasting taxpayer time and money?

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    8. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      I spent my first two years of calculus lectures sleeping in. I scored near perfect in both classes.

      WHY do people have to be at lectures they don't need, again?

      It's the university's stupid rules that don't allow me to just test out of the classes: they've got to have their money.

      But why would they want me sitting in a lecture distracting other people while I surf youtube?

      The university's are in a special position where they can able to apply for student visa's for their students. A condition of that is that they must check the people they are applying for visas for are indeed genuine students. Many students turn up on student visa's, never go to class, and apply for permanent residency after 5 years. They have no intention of studying and in some cases don't know enough English to even begain to understand the subjects they are enrolled for.

    9. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by 1s44c · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you're at the university on a visa, there's an expectation you're attending the university. Don't laugh, it happens.

      If the UKBA feels the university isn't doing enough, this happens: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-19425718

      And there are countless other colleges running fake courses or dumbass courses just to get people student visas. Or at least there were, the government is trying real hard to clean it up.

      There used to be posters all over London advertisting that if you enroll in some basic class at some Indian run dodgy college you get the right to stay in the country. It was all one big visa scam.

    10. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by 1s44c · · Score: 2

      I know, right? The live sports playing on the laptop screen in front of you must have distracted the hell out of you while you were posting to Slashdot during the lecture.

      Don't fucking pretend you weren't.

      Am I the last one left that actually tries to pay attention to things?

      Sometimes I sit in meetings and half the people who turn up are on a phone or typing on a laptop. Only a few bright and/or stubborn people are mentally in the room.

    11. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by mhotchin · · Score: 1

      Isn't the fix for this then that the Border Agency gets *those* stdents transcripts at the end of each term, and if they are failing out, the BA deports them?

      Who cares if you are in a classroom? I can fail just as easily by sleeping in class as by sleeping in. Deport the students that don't have an adequate transcript, done.

    12. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by 1s44c · · Score: 2

      If I had an A-grade-level understanding of the material and was watching Football with my earbuds in, and some snot-nosed punk told me to turn it off, I'd do nothing...then kick his ass the second he stepped foot off the school grounds.

      -- Ethanol-fueled

      The guy doing the asking isn't doing so to prevent your supposed sporting enjoyment, but because your screen is distracting him from the lecture. If you are not mentally there you should not be physically there.

      And you have an anger issue, either that you you are having a really bad day.

    13. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by MachDelta · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't these "not-a-student" students be getting tossed out of school after a few semesters (it's two, where I attend) with a 0 GPA?
      Or are they hopping universities? How would they even get accepted five times?

    14. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by tbird81 · · Score: 1

      Internet tough guy, eh?

      Are you the real ethanol fueled though? Or a troll?

    15. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is wrong with taking notes on the meeting? It is kind of useful to have things written down so I do not risk forgetting something I will need.

      And yes, you can take notes in electronic form.

    16. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by benjfowler · · Score: 0

      The UKBA have clamped down *hard* on the above-chip-shop colleges. They're all basically gone now.

    17. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by xelah · · Score: 1

      It does seem quite bizarre, not to mention patronizing. IIRC, at my university we were entitled to attend any lectures we saw fit, whether designed for our course or not. The only time anyone might feel that they really had to turn up for lectures was for smaller lectures where their tutor happened to be the lecturer.....

    18. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by benjfowler · · Score: 0

      They have to find those students first, before they can deport them.

      This country, unlike (say) Australia, doesn't have an efficient border protection force, and doesn't have mandatory detention. There is neither the political will, nor the resources to go after every chancer trying to scam the visa system.

    19. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by xelah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You prove it by passing the exams at the end of your course. If you fail because you didn't go to the lectures you should have gone to....well, hard luck, and get saving for your next attempt. It's a university, not a school, and you shouldn't expect to get nannied like a child.

    20. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by xelah · · Score: 1

      I think the reputed problem is that there are private colleges of various kinds (usually not proper universities) who offer courses whose main appeal is the visa. Colleges like that aren't going to throw out failing students. And the solution is to look very carefully in to those colleges, not to make life difficult for students shopping the world market for accredited degree courses.

    21. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      "The university's are in a special position where they can able to apply for student visa's for their students."

      That's all great (if we ignore mis-spellings) but the fact is that fingerprint scanning is a terrible way to enforce anything. They don't work worth a damn. They are easy to spoof. If you haven't read the reports, the watch the MythBusters segment that was dedicated to this. The technology has not advanced significantly since then.

    22. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by lgw · · Score: 1

      Thanks - TFS made no kind of sense at all without your explanation. Now I have some clue what's going on here.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    23. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      If you're at the university on a visa, there's an expectation you're attending the university.

      You can easily prove that by passing exams (or by failing to pass them in any other way than being absent). Anyway, it is ridiculous to make double standards for students. Stuff like this makes my backwater home country look extraordinarily enlightened. UK looks more and more like a police state in comparison.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    24. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by lgw · · Score: 1

      Dude, make a new account. We need more posters unafraid of diverging from the groupthink around here!

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    25. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by lgw · · Score: 1

      , how many more are wasting taxpayer time and money?

      This is the quiet path from socialism to fascism. No one would say a think like this if students paid their own way, but since the government's paying, well then, it's just good common sense to take some of your rights away. Every endeavor that the government takes over funding of leads to the same place, it seems: since the government is paying, you now need to follow a new set of rules to make sure you don't waste the People's money.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    26. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiot. Tuition fees in the UK have gone UP recently. Until about a few decades ago university education was almost wholly government funded, but tuition fees payable by the student have been steadily increasing. Newcastle University probably charges £9000 a year these days.

      Maybe if you'd gone to university you'd learn how to check basic facts before proposing a hypothesis.

    27. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by leathered · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I worked in a UK university CS department for four years in the mid 00s. Foreign students turning up for a couple of lectures then disappearing was a huge problem. Not for the university of course, who didn't give a shit as long as the fees were paid. Even if the fees weren't paid they were simply kicked off the course but this was never communicated to the UK Borders Agency.

      Since then I've been told that the universities have had a royal boot up the arse from the government and are to inform immediately if a foreign student has poor or no attendance. What we're seeing here is probably an overreaction to this.

      --
      For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    28. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by BeaverCleaver · · Score: 1

      And the solution is definitely NOT to have real universities (like Newcastle) implement stupid, expensive, invasive, ineffective measures like this. Can anyone think of any good that could possibly come from this?

      As many other poster have pointed out, if people don't want to pay attention to the lecture, it's counter-productive to force them to attend.

    29. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      WHY do people have to be at lectures they don't need, again?

      Someone has to sit in the front row and correct the lecturer's mistakes...

    30. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Many students turn up on student visa's, never go to class, and apply for permanent residency after 5 years. They have no intention of studying and in some cases don't know enough English to even begain to understand the subjects they are enrolled for."

      That's fine. In which case they fail the first year and get kicked out. Is border control too lazy to get relevant student transcripts, or make it a CONDITION of admission that they can get access to the relevant students' transcripts? No transcript, no visa. You're gone.

    31. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      If you are in the country on a student visa, shouldn't the Border Agency (or what-ever it's called in the UK) be getting their transcripts at the end of each term?

    32. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I never had any trouble for skipping lectures at Uni.

      One lecturer hated me because I skipped her lectures. They bored me. She was pissed off when I passed her course with ease anyway.

      One lecturer was so used to me turning up at the start of the lecture, taking his handouts (his handouts were basically an entire book, over the course of the year) and leaving again before he started the lecture, that he'd just hand the notes to me on his way in. One day he did stop and ask me to stay for a couple of minutes, in which time he told everybody that the next lecture was mandatory, because it would be the students giving the lecture. I went to that one; he failed everybody that didn't turn up. Basically he didn't mind us getting an education our own way, but wouldn't tolerate us disrespecting each other.

      I skipped over half the lectures in over half the courses I did. Of the few lectures I attended, I slept through many. One (actually very good) lecturer woke me up mid-lecture once by giving grief to the guy sat behind me. She threw him out because he was chatting instead of listening. Guess it was a good job I wasn't snoring.

      Another lecturer did spot me sleeping, so asked me a question about the subject. I struggled awake, asked her to repeat the question and gave an answer that wasn't just not wrong, but took the conversation in a direction she hadn't expected. I went back to sleep.

      Even when awake, I often didn't pay attention. I'm not good at that. In one lecture I was challenged to tell the room what I was discussing with a friend. So I told the truth: "We were wondering, if you take that metal plate just there out, will the roof fall down?" Cue 40 students and a lecturer looking up at the ceiling, all going, "hmm" and disagreeing on the answer.

      But yeah, attending lectures isn't what University is about. Turning up and being a good little child has fuck all to do with learning, academic capability or knowledge.

    33. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose you didn't need lectures because Google existed to help you solve that which you did not already know. That or you knew the material already and were just taking the class to get the grade for what you already knew.

      I went to university pre-Google and a lot of times, what the professor lectured was not basically what was in the book. If they rushed through it, too bad, it was still on the test because they lectured on it. If the professor failed to control their class and let people near the back of the room talk over the lecture, too bad he or she still lectured anyway and it was still on the test. I had a computer graphics professor spend 5 minutes on a lecture topic that consisted of 3 questions as part of a final exam. That type of stuff. Lectures were still needed then--unless one already knew the material and only needed the class to get the passing grade, as opposed to learning the material brand new from class.

      Oh, and I didn't have the luxury of either a search engine as good as Google, nor having a laptop to take notes in class. I had to do it the older way, using pencil and paper, scrambling to keep up when the professor just erased and changed one number in a math problem lecture, not having the blanks filled in when the professor skipped steps by doing parts of the problem in their head and not writing it on the board.

      Supplemental material consisted of paper books in a less than stellar university library, not Wikipedia nor any significant tutorial web pages. My computers available to me in university computer labs at the time I was in school were outdated Macs (Proformas at best and Mac Quadras were just becoming available), ATT i386 PC's or IBM PS/2 computers, and VAX/VMS access using green screen monochrome VT320 terminals.

      I might have had it easier than those who had to program computers using punch cards, but the newer generation of students still has it easier than that: supercomputers in their computer labs, search engines as good as Google or even Bing (as opposed to Archie, Infoseek, Gopher, and early Yahoo), and the bookstores actually have useful books above and beyond those found in university libraries.

    34. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      If they are in the classroom, they aren't working in a restaurant or some similar low skilled job with no intention of ever completing the course.

    35. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Are you the real ethanol fueled though? Or a troll?

      No. Not or, and.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    36. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by penix1 · · Score: 1

      I can see the OPs point. If you know the subject being lectured then you should be able to clep out of it. Take the exam and if you can pass it then you have the credit and can move on. Having to sit through a lecture that you could probably give is boring as all hell. Attendance policies ensures that people who don't belong there are disrupting the lesson for those that do all because some asshat set a policy of failure if you aren't there.

      --
      This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
    37. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Princeofcups · · Score: 1

      I spent my first two years of calculus lectures sleeping in. I scored near perfect in both classes.

      My question is, why are you taking those classes if you already are an expert on the material? Couldn't you ask your department to get you into higher level classes? To me this is a complete waste of money and time. I was at school to take classes that really challenged me. Maybe that's why my grades were not straight A's. Also why I got my money's worth out of my education.

      --
      The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.
    38. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of the summary did you fail to comprehend?

      Thats right, the part about the need to prove attendance of *foreign students on a student visa*. READ THE FUCKING SUMMARY, YOU MORON !!

    39. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by beelsebob · · Score: 2

      Indeed, at least when I was a student, the idea was (in nearly the words of Sir Terry Pratchett) to put students and books in the same place, and hope that something in one found its way into the other (of course students positioned themselves in the pub for roughly the same reason).

      University isn't meant to be about enforcing how, or when you learn. It's meant to be about you expanding your knowledge of a subject, and it just happens that they check at the end that your knowledge is sufficiently expanded to be called a {Bachelor | Master | Doctor}

    40. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your mistake, faggot, is assuming I won't kick your arse and then bend you backwards to shove your face in your own half-wiped anus.

      you are a parasite who contributes nothing to society.

    41. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by wild_quinine · · Score: 2

      What part of the summary did you fail to comprehend?

      Thats right, the part about the need to prove attendance of *foreign students on a student visa*. READ THE FUCKING SUMMARY, YOU MORON !!

      If they're passing the courses, who cares if they're attending the lectures? What are the chances that someone who can pass degree level courses through disciplined self-study is likely to be *less* of an asset to their country?

      The University is treating the students like criminals because the UK Border Agency encourages this. But the UK Border Agency know fuck all about Universities, so why should we take their opinion on Universities over that of the instituions themselves? Hell, the UKBA can barely manage their own house, let alone our centuries old and rapidly losing its edge (but once world class) Higher Education system.

    42. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      Because they're here to get an education, not to work or otherwise take advantage of living in the UK. If they're not attending the courses, they're not being educated, regardless of if they pass it or not.

    43. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but that's just BS, pure and simple. Universities provide a whole raft of ways to learn: libraries, online resources, notes, tutorials... and lectures. So some people learn best by listening to some guy talking while others learn best by sitting down and reading the material? Big freakin' whoop. The worst you can say about people who miss lectures (or skim read the texts for that matter) is that they've wasted some portion of the money they spent to pay for said lectures (or texts).

      What next: sit someone down next to students in the library to make sure they read the textbook? Eyeball tracking to make sure they read 90+% of online materials? Tag and track to make sure they spend enough hours in the library?

    44. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      Why do you even bother showing up to lectures if you're not going to pay any attention?

    45. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by xelah · · Score: 1

      So what? If they come here, hand tens of thousands of pounds over to a UK university, fail to use the service they've bought and then leave....what's the problem? The important part is enforcing the 'leave' part, not the 'attending a university' part. Only if it's a sham university does it warrants some investigation. And it isn't.

      The current government has stupidly committed itself to getting immigrant numbers down for the sake of getting the numbers down, whatever the cost, and it's forcing them in to doing it in ways that have no benefit whatsoever for anyone. Hence the attack on students, and also to some extent on marriage visas (because you get a two-for-one offer on net migration.....one immigrant not migrating in, and one UK citizen forced out).

    46. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by xelah · · Score: 1

      Why? If they're considering whether to issue a more permanent visa at the end of their course then considering their qualifications and job prospects is perfectly reasonable. But during the course? When they're paying good money to buy services from a British institution, and helping fund the British education system and promote an understanding and sympathy towards British and Western culture? Sure, some will work illegally, whether attending their course or not, but they'll still have to leave when their student visa expires. But inconveniencing and making unwelcome all of the buyers of an important British export out of a paranoia that'll catch few illegal workers....what's the point? Black economy jobs aren't exactly desirable, especially once you've paid university fees..... (which are higher for non-citizens and cover the full cost, and more). A cheap language school, maybe.....but a full blown university?

    47. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 2

      Nothing wrong with taking notes, if that's all you're doing. My experience of meetings is that most people are doing anything but taking notes. I prefer to nominate a scribe and have everyone else close their lids unless they're

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    48. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Kielistic · · Score: 1

      Because of professors that punish people based on their attendance. Or will only give a piece of key information to people attending lectures. Or many other reasons that boil down to a professor believing everyone needs to waste 50 - 90 minutes in a lecture hall when many of those students would learn the lesson much better in 15 minutes with a textbook.

    49. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by RockDoctor · · Score: 2

      If you're at the university on a visa, there's an expectation you're attending the university.

      You can easily prove that by passing exams (or by failing to pass them in any other way than being absent).

      The point is not about passing or failing courses. It's about people who get a visa to ENTER the country on the basis that they will be FULL TIME students supporting themselves out of their own funds and doing NO WORK in the country because the DO NOT HAVE A WORK PERMIT. (FYI : being a student is not considered "work" in this country.)

      What has long been a significant problem has been people FALSELY applying for a student visa, granted on the conditions above, then violating the visa conditions by WORKING WITHOUT A WORK PERMIT, then frequently stopping attending their courses, then continuing to WORK WITHOUT A WORK PERMIT, then overstaying their visa after it has been rescinded because of the failure to abide by the CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH THE VISA WAS ISSUED.

      An analogy : I allow you to rent a room in my lodging house under the contractual conditions that you pay your rent and don't shit in the hallway. Soon, I start seeing turds in the hallway (non-attendance at the course), and then you stop paying your rent (disappear into the illegal immigrants underworld). I then want to take action to evict you from my house. Under this analogy, checking attendance at courses (on a lecture by lecture basis) is comparable to checking the hallway for turds several times a day.

      There is a complicating factor that anti-discrimination legislation means that either everyone has their attendance checked, or no-one does. In the analogy, I'd need to patrol all the hallways looking for turds, not just those hallways where I'd rented rooms to people with green skin.

      There are other ways this could be done, but they'd probably require more time and effort on the behalf of administrative staff.

      Yes, this sort of thing does make life more difficult for legal immigrants, and legal foreign students too. Which with the common petty racism of British people and officialdom (I speak as a Briton, with a non-British wife), makes life significantly more difficult than it needs to be. And it is a right pain in the arse. But in this case, both sides of the argument have got reasonable cases to make.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    50. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I didn't CLEP out of anything. Getting easy As in Chem, English, Physics, and basic History classes cements GPA in the first year, rather than starting hard in the transition period.

      Attendance was only required in the classes where attendance was (learning-wise) optional. I got in trouble once when I showed up in class to take tests and no more. There was no punishment, just had my ID checked, and disapproval was voiced. When I did it again, he didn't say anything, but he remembered me from last time. He may have looked up my grades and saw that I got an A without attending, so there was no issue. I've been known to bring a recreational book to read in class for those that took attendance regularly with penalties for absence.

      I never thought College would be more strict on attendance than high school was for a public school in one of the largest districts in the US. I'd walk out of most classes, and entertain myself with independent study. But in College, I was expected to show up and follow the syllabus, so I guess the transition for me was the opposite of what most people had to adjust to.

    51. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      If they're passing the courses, who cares if they're attending the lectures?

      The UK Border Authority does. Yes, even if they are a genius and can pass exams without attending any lectures.

      The point is they are in the UK on a visa issued so they can attend a UK university. If they're not attending, then they don't need the visa. More to the point experience shows that they are generally not attending because they are doing paid work. Which they don't have a visa for.

      Criminals? There's two issues here: recording attendance and using fingerprint scanners to do it. I see nothing wrong with recording attendance. Indeed it was done at my uni back in the 1980s.

      Fingerprints seems over the top. But perhaps they have good reason for that too.

    52. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I went to university pre-Google and a lot of times, what the professor lectured was not basically what was in the book. If they rushed through it, too bad, it was still on the test because they lectured on it. If the professor failed to control their class and let people near the back of the room talk over the lecture, too bad he or she still lectured anyway and it was still on the test.

      For some of those, if there was a conflict between book and lecture, the book won. To keep a good handle on the material, it was in your best interest to read before the class, and don't show up, unless you didn't understand something and wanted to ask a question or hear his interpretation. There was more than one class I only showed up for tests in.

    53. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      20 years ago it was taxpayer money and until a few years also subsidised, but frankly the latest fees they are indeed laying for their course. And most graduates will have higher salaries hence tax so will be paying for it twice, in the long run.

      They're clients paying for their course. It's up to them if they go or not. This isnt teens truancing from a compulsory secondary education, these are fully grown adults furthering their education. They shouldn't be nannied.

      A LARGE part of university is learning how to independently study, research etc outside of what's taught in classes. Not all lectures actually aid the course - I skipped many of the ones teaching the c language basics for example as I already knew it very well, but they had to include it to get others up to speed for the next modules. The lecturers don't expect you to attend absolutely everything, and they don't expect it to be the sole place you're learning anything,

    54. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by jrumney · · Score: 1
      • 1. Polish and Lithuanians come in and take all the jobs that the British didn't want anyway.
      • 2. Daily Mail readers sit around on their arse all day complaining about all the immigrants stealing British jobs.
      • 3. Government promises to do something about it.
      • 4. EU won't let them do anything about EU nationals, so Government has to find another scapegoat.
      • 5. Government over the last couple of decades has been letting every man and his dog set up a University. Some of these are well dodgy, existing only to assist visa scams.
      • 6. Government clamps down on all student visa holders, especially ones with brown skin attending reputable Universities like Nottingham.
      • 7. BNP is happy that their policies are being carried out, despite never having won a seat in British parliament.
    55. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was teaching, I didn't give a fuck about attendance with one exception.
      You can bother me and ask questions any time you want about the subject-matter, if you were in the lecture. If you don't come to the lecture, I'm restricting my time for you outside that lecture. (Not that that happened much)

      There were also courses that had mandatory attendance, not theory, those required attendance because they had permanent evaluation. (think of lab courses)

      While I didn't discriminate during examinations, it's weird to get students at the exam you haven't seen before. You also feel more sympathy with the students you know and with oral exams that can unconsciously influence you. You really have to spend time to check which answer got what points, and correcting is time consuming as it is already.

    56. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Student visas do not count towards the 5-year period for settlement. Please read the rules and regulations on the UKBA website before believing tabloid hysteria.
      Tier-2 work permit visas with £40000/- annual salaries are needed to allow people to stay in the UK for 5 years. AFAIK these do not count toward permanent "indefinite-leave-to-remain". Only people on Tier-1 Visas are allowed to apply for permanent settlement ( This only applies to non-EU countries)

      Tier-1 visas are given to entrepreneurs ( you need to show you are willing to pay/invest £150,000 ) or "extremely gifted/talented individuals" (nobel prize winners are what her majesty's govt are looking for - more like pop stars if you ask me) .

    57. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I spent my first two years of calculus lectures sleeping in. I scored near perfect in both classes.

      WHY do people have to be at lectures they don't need, again?

      It's the university's stupid rules that don't allow me to just test out of the classes: they've got to have their money.

      But why would they want me sitting in a lecture distracting other people while I surf youtube?

      The university's are in a special position where they can able to apply for student visa's for their students. A condition of that is that they must check the people they are applying for visas for are indeed genuine students. Many students turn up on student visa's, never go to class, and apply for permanent residency after 5 years. They have no intention of studying and in some cases don't know enough English to even begain to understand the subjects they are enrolled for.

      "Many students turn up on student visa's, never go to class, and apply for permanent residency after 5 years".

      They probably end up taking a Tier-1/Tier-2 visa after runiversity to get a job and a salary and they then start the 5-year wait towards "indefinite leave-to-remain". Either that or claim assylum. As the law stands student visas do not count towards the "indefinite leave-to-remain" status. This is the legal way non-EU applicants can attain "permanent residency"

      Student visas by themselves cannot lead you to "permanent residency". If that is what you were suggesting , I suggest you read the law on the UKBA website.

    58. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by hobarrera · · Score: 1

      I've known plenty of people who are full time students by staying at home reading all the apropiate bibliography.
      There are some that are really good at learning by reading and suck at having this taught to them. It's stupid to make them go to class if they don't need to.

    59. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      This isn't about them working illegally (that's a completely different issue), it's about them automatically getting their green card after having a student visa for 5 years. I guess they could check the transcripts just before the 5 years is up, but they should still be checking it.

    60. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't about them working illegally (that's a completely different issue), it's about them automatically getting their green card after having a student visa for 5 years. I guess they could check the transcripts just before the 5 years is up, but they should still be checking it.

      UKBA rules clearly state that student visas do not count towards "indefinite-leave-to-remain" (UKs version of a green-card). According to the current rules (which have been in place for the best part of 2 years now) , only a Tier-1 visa (for entrepreneurs who are willing to invest £200000/- ) from abroad or a minimum seed capital of £50000/- from recognized venture capitalists) , investors or people with exceptional talent ( they are looking for nobel prize winners, pop-stars , celebrities etc ) , will pass muster for "indefinite leave-to-remain". "Indefinite leave-to-remain" can only be obtained by economic migrants this way. The current rules have even removed the route to indefinite leave to remain for people on a Tier-2 work permit visa who have stayed here for 5 years ( ie people on a minimum salary of £40000/- ). Only Tier-1 classifies.

      The other option is assylum or marriage to an EU citizen (but thats a whole other topic). UK Tier-4 student visas do not count. Pick up a form for indefinite leave-to-remain and try to tick the box that says you will be allowed to stay because you were a student here for 5 years. Also read the guidance notes section that clearly specifies which categories of visa can add up to "indefinite leave-to-remain". If an international student decides go underground and overstay his/her visa, the police and UKBA are the legal entities getting involved.
      Any further tightening of screws is just UKBA projecting red-tape onto universities.

    61. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      The point is not about passing or failing courses. It's about people who get a visa to ENTER the country on the basis that they will be FULL TIME students supporting themselves out of their own funds and doing NO WORK in the country because the DO NOT HAVE A WORK PERMIT

      And checking their school attendance would prevent that...exactly how? By way of example, I worked basically from home even as I was attending college. (Hell, if I were in Britain, I'd do it anyway. I don't see how foreign royalties paid to a foreign account could be of any meaningful interest to them.)

      An analogy : I allow you to rent a room in my lodging house under the contractual conditions that you pay your rent and don't shit in the hallway. Soon, I start seeing turds in the hallway (non-attendance at the course), and then you stop paying your rent (disappear into the illegal immigrants underworld). I then want to take action to evict you from my house. Under this analogy, checking attendance at courses (on a lecture by lecture basis) is comparable to checking the hallway for turds several times a day.

      It's a very good analogy indeed, meaning that it makes about as much sense as your original claim.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    62. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      I've known plenty of people who are full time students by staying at home reading all the apropiate bibliography.

      I've known such people too. And it's not relevant.

      There are some that are really good at learning by reading and suck at having this taught to them. It's stupid to make them go to class if they don't need to.

      The terms and conditions of the course and university you're signing up to are "do this", "do that", and "paint your belly button with woad". If you don't like it, go to a different course in a different country. That is the choice that is being presented. If you don't like the terms of the contract you're looking at, don't sign it.

      There is a case to be made for existing students, who have effectively had the terms and conditions of their contract changed under them. They have got grounds for complaint - and contract law etc gives them the opportunity to do it. But new students - not a hope in hell. If the university goes bust over this ... tough. It would be a shame (I considered Newcastle myself, and I've friends who did go there ; good university. The month I spent working in Newcastle was a fun time.), but that is clearly a gamble that the Senatus have decided to take.

      (Incidentally, my degree course required an average of 6 hours a week in the laboratory, handling physical specimens and expensive equipment. Non-attendance at laboratories was grounds for being dumped from the course. There is nothing new here to me. Not all courses can be passed by book-learning alone.)

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    63. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      And checking their school attendance would prevent that...exactly how?

      OK : some basic maths. There are (to a close approximation) 24 hours in a day. Most people spend about 8 hours a day in sleeping, eating, and picking their noses, leaving 16 hours potentially available for what we can loosely classify as "work". If you require people to be physically present at a location for 8 hours a day where they have to do something we can loosely call "study", then there remains only 8 hours in a day when "work" can possibly be done. A reduction of hours potentially available for "work" from 16 hours/day to 8 hours/day is going to make it harder (not impossible, just harder) to perform "work" for 16 hours a day. It depends on how little sleep time you actually do need.

      One of my lab lecturers would lock the lab door about 10 minutes after the nominal start time (preventing anyone else from getting in), and "take the register" (in the form of completed and signed worksheets) in the last quarter hour of the laboratory (he wasn't unreasonable - he knew how long it took to get back to the accommodation before the kitchens closed) ; you could leave any time you want, but you wouldn't get your work considered in your marking if you left early. You did your time in the labs, and you did your homework time too, at least as many hours again at the microscope. Those who put their hours in at the eyepiece, got better ; 25 years later it still shows in who is better at their work.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    64. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      A reduction of hours potentially available for "work" from 16 hours/day to 8 hours/day is going to make it harder (not impossible, just harder) to perform "work" for 16 hours a day.

      A student intent on both studying and working wouldn't generally work full time, and there are weekends still.

      One of my lab lecturers

      Except that I wasn't talking about labs. Attendance there is mandatory for passing the subject anyway, regardless of from where you hail. (One would expect, though, that I shouldn't have had to point that out, since the article talks about *lectures*.)

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    65. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      A student intent on both studying and working wouldn't generally work full time, and there are weekends still.

      And how precisely do you tell the difference between

      1. those who are coming into the country with the intention of studying for their qualification, and
      2. those who are coming into the country on the only visa that they can get with the intention of working for (cash) wages (at least some of which they send back to the home country)

      ?The problem is not immigrant students wishing to study ; the problem is people immigrating by posing as students. Anatomically the two groups are indistinguishable. In terms of their visas they are indistinguishable (one was obtained by deception, but you can't tell that until after the event and trial). Unless you can think of something different, then the only way of distinguishing the two groups is by their behaviour in diligence at their studies.

      A reminder : this is not targeted at tracking EU citizens studying in Britain (who have the right to work, and the right of residence, and the option of studying), it is targeted at tracking non-EU citizens (who do not have the right to work, who do not have the right of residence except on the absolute condition that they are genuinely pursuing a course of study in the UK, and who have the option of remaining in the country only while they are actively studying).

      The problem is that, without tattooing immigrants on the forehead as they enter the country, there is no simple way to distinguish the two classes of people.

      At my work there are two classes of employee : those who take drugs to the worksite (2 that I've met in 25 years in the profession) and the rest (around 40,000 people) who do not. However every one of us is subject to random piss-testing at the worksite and breathalyser when getting on the transport to the site. Those of us who don't take drugs (at work) do feel aggrieved at being tarred with the same brush as the few who do. The same problem of distinguishing the two classes applies ; and a similarly broad brush solution is applied. Your better suggestions would be appreciated, because I don't like pissing in the pot, nor having my personal freedom to have a joint inhibited by the fact that I might have to piss in the pot in the next 6 months.

      and there are weekends still.

      Not if you don't have a work permit there aren't. If you are not an EU citizen and do not have a work permit, you are not permitted to work. That is why the phrase "work permit" includes the noun "work" and the verb "permit". Citizen's rights (or subject's rights, if you're British as well as EU) do not apply, because, by definition, you are not a citizen (or subject). Your human rights to obtain paid work in your country of origin are not infringed ; don't let the door hit you on the arse as you leave.

      FYI, voluntary (i.e. unpaid) work is also frowned upon ; strictly you should get the written permission of an immigration officer working in his/her formal capacity before doing voluntary work which could potentially displace a citizen (subject) from employment. People have been deported for this error. Probably, getting a work permit for limited classes of unpaid work is possible as an immigrant student, but I bet it would be a struggle.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    66. Re:Why do I have to BE at a lecture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don' tknow if you will see this, but a few corrections

      1) Student visas allow work for 20 hours a week (issued before 2012), or 10 hours a week now. This includes voluntary work. Tourists may not work, voluntary or not. A US citizen when present in the UK as a tourist, working for an American company and being paid in USD to an American account, is working illegally and if discovered may be banned for 10 years.

      2) "British subject" is a term that, since 1983, has applied to a very small class of people, both of whom have never obtained a passport from another country except the UK (but did not become British citizens in 1983 for one reason or another): Irish women who were married before 1949 to someone who was not British, and people living in India and Pakistan who were born outside those countries before 1949 and are unable to obtain a passport from their country of residence.

      3) If you pay the fees and have the entry requirements to enter Newcastle, it's unlikely that you are posing as a student. The fees for non-EU students are higher than the minimum wage, and nobody is going to employ you illegally for a highly paid job. However rules are rules. One solution could be to require foreign students only to do the fingerprint thing, or just to sign in at every lecture.

      I am an American attending a university in London. They scan everybody's student ID cards randomly.

  3. Border checkpoints by Xugumad · · Score: 2

    > claiming the scanners would 'turn universities into border checkpoints'

    Bit late for that.

    Seriously though; universities have to prove overseas students are actually attending the university. How would other suggest we do this?

    1. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      WHY do universities have to prove that overseas students are actually attending the university? Why is this so critical?

      Sure, I understand that you don't want the students getting jobs illegally. But what does that have to do with the university? Employers need to make sure that their workers have proper immigration status. It shouldn't be the university's responsibility. And beyond that, who cares?

    2. Re:Border checkpoints by russotto · · Score: 2

      Seriously though; universities have to prove overseas students are actually attending the university. How would other suggest we do this?

      I'd suggest GPS anklets for all overseas students. If that doesn't work, shock collars. Seriously, do you think a mandate justifies any means necessary to fulfill it?

    3. Re:Border checkpoints by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      You would have to take that up with the government, it's their requirement: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-19425718

      I'd have to check the specifics of what the requirements are (they're actually not terribly harsh, just more admin work we didn't need), but they are something that are imposed on universities.

    4. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does not have anything to do with the university. The students pay the same fees to the university whether lectures are attended or not. The government is merely outsourcing, or is that insourcing, people monitoring.

    5. Re:Border checkpoints by Xugumad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's fair, but I did want people to think about this.

      My suggestion was that we do wifi-pinging from student mobiles to cover most cases (as in you download an app and it checks you're in-range of our wifi), and use attendance at tutorials and 2-3 annual full checks (as in turn up with your passport so we can double check everything) to cover the requirement for more in-depth checks. Having tried ID card based lecture attendance, we've found mostly it's a huge pain; even when it works correctly it creates long queues at the start of lectures, and it's more hardware we have to manage. I don't imagine Newcastle will be doing fingerprint checks for long, personally...

    6. Re:Border checkpoints by CRCulver · · Score: 5, Informative

      Seriously though; universities have to prove overseas students are actually attending the university. How would other suggest we do this?

      By requiring that the student present a transcript each year at visa-renewal time in order showing that he or she has taken exams and gained a certain amount of credits toward a degree. This is how it is done in Finland, at least. This has the advantage of not hassling students who feel that their time is better spent in the library instead of at lectures.

    7. Re:Border checkpoints by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      > This has the advantage of not hassling students who feel that their time is better spent in the library instead of at lecture.

      Which makes me think, why aren't we using book lending as an activity...

    8. Re:Border checkpoints by Dekker3D · · Score: 1

      Could at least exempt all students who don't need a visa. That would cut down on harassment. Other than that, I'd agree... just require actual results at the end of the year, and perhaps at the ends of semesters or whatever they're called. If you score 40% or less for more than one thing, or don't bother showing up at all, you get kicked out.

    9. Re:Border checkpoints by westlake · · Score: 1

      My suggestion was that we do wifi-pinging from student mobiles to cover most cases (as in you download an app and it checks you're in-range of our wifi), and use attendance at tutorials and 2-3 annual full checks (as in turn up with your passport so we can double check everything) to cover the requirement for more in-depth checks.

      What makes this simpler, cheaper, or more reliable then the fingerprint ID check at the entrance to the lecture hall?

    10. Re:Border checkpoints by mhotchin · · Score: 1

      I got a double major in CS and Pure Math, *never* borrowed a book from the Library.

      Library activity is one of those easy-to-measure-but-meaningless numbers.

    11. Re:Border checkpoints by 1s44c · · Score: 4, Informative

      WHY do universities have to prove that overseas students are actually attending the university? Why is this so critical?

      Anyone signed onto a course gets a student visa. After staying for 5 years they can apply for permanent residency. Because of this there are plenty of people with a very basic, or no, education who sign up to courses they never attend as a way to get permanent residency in the UK and the benefits that go with it.

      Now if someone genuinely spends 5 years in education they are an asset to the country and should be allowed to stay. If they know nothing and just want free stuff from the state that's not OK.

    12. Re:Border checkpoints by 1s44c · · Score: 1

      Seriously though; universities have to prove overseas students are actually attending the university. How would other suggest we do this?

      I'd suggest GPS anklets for all overseas students. If that doesn't work, shock collars. Seriously, do you think a mandate justifies any means necessary to fulfill it?

      How about having a register and a prof who actually knows who the students are? Or at the least checks the same student doesn't claim to be more than one person.

      The really sad thing is that everything other than the fingerprint readers can be gamed in some way.

    13. Re:Border checkpoints by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      My suggestion was that we do wifi-pinging from student mobiles to cover most cases (as in you download an app and it checks you're in-range of our wifi)...

      Then just one student needs to carry the phones of his friends, and the system is circumvented.

      I don't imagine Newcastle will be doing fingerprint checks for long, personally...

      I agree. With the students and even the staff strongly against it, those scanners will get vandalized within the first 24 hours. Whoever came up with this idea is a real idiot.

    14. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we're forcing everyone to do this because of a few people who abuse the system? It's not the university's fucking problem.

    15. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "So we're forcing everyone to do this because of a few people who abuse the system?"

      Sadly, its not a "few" - its an organised traffic in illegal immigrants.

      Another way to remove the need for such draconian control systems would be to corral all would be overseas students in a reception centre and make them take entry exams at the appropriate level, in their own pedagogical language (ie the language used for teaching in their homeland), and a test in basic english. Fail either, and back they go at their own expense. I'd actually rate understanding English higher, after all the courses will be taught in English...

    16. Re:Border checkpoints by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      Sorry, realised this is obvious to me, but requires explanation.

      There are fixed things we absolutely have to check, such as checking visa & passport at the start of the academic year (might be each semester, not sure off hand), but there's a more flexible set of requirements in checking the student is generally attending the university.

      What that means is we can tell students they need to be attending tutorials regularly and/or taking out books regularly or can be expected to be called in for an ID check if we haven't got any other proof they're actually attending the university. We don't want to spend time pulling students halfway across town so we can glance at their passport and tick a checkbox any more than they want to have to do so, so anything we can do to minimise the number we do that for is a good thing.

    17. Re:Border checkpoints by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      We have wifi infrastructure in place anyway, and many of the students have mobile devices. It's therefore not a lot of developer work to have our university mobile app be able to say "Yeah, I'm on the right network" on a daily basis, or on request when students are meant to be in lecture, or something. In comparison to fingerprint checks we don't have to equip every lecture theatre with fingerprint scanners (probably two, so we have a backup in case of problems) and computers (again, two) and then maintain that extra infrastructure.

      The in depth checks are a right pain, but we legally have to do them, so nothing's going to change there either way.

    18. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Library activity is one of those easy-to-measure-but-meaningless numbers.

      To be fair, so is lecture attendance.

      The quality of lecturers when I was at university ranged from almost unmissable to almost unthinkable. IMHO, spending half your working day in one of the most absurdly learning-hostile environments yet developed by humanity is rarely worth it for anyone not towards the "almost unmissable" end of the spectrum.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    19. Re:Border checkpoints by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      If they know nothing and just want free stuff from the state that's not OK.

      How is that different from current native-born UK, and for that matter, US citizens? Hell, even *after* they graduate as well? Believe me, as someone who has tried to hire competent university graduates, even many of the ones who graduate with high marks are shockingly ignorant and incompetent in the fields they hold degrees in.

      I don't care if a candidate graduated with an advanced degree with high grade-averages from the most prestigious universities or doesn't even have a GED. If you can *do the work* is what matters, and I've found that a H.S. grad is often more competent and knowledgeable than someone with a Masters or PhD. I swear, I think today's colleges and universities are actually making people dumber than if they'd not attended a college or university at all!

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    20. Re:Border checkpoints by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "This is how it is done in Finland, at least."

      But what has a Finn ever contributed to the world?

      (runs)

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    21. Re:Border checkpoints by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      If they fail their courses, can they continue with their program? It seems like passing classes as a requirement for the student visa would fulfill the same purpose, booting those who aren't actually showing competence.

    22. Re:Border checkpoints by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      Linux for starters

    23. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. I felt that my time was better spent in bed than attending my 8am calculus lecture - still got an A in the class... :-)

    24. Re:Border checkpoints by arwel · · Score: 1

      Anyone signed onto a course gets a student visa. After staying for 5 years they can apply for permanent residency

      Except that time spent in the country on a student visa doesn't count towards permanent residency.

    25. Re:Border checkpoints by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Here's how it works. You apply to a university. You pay them $10,000 for classes. You then skip all the classes and illegally get a job (likely making more than you paid for the classes). You illegally work when you are supposed to be in class. The university sponsored your student visa, so they are getting paid to help you work illegally. And you don't see any problem with that?

    26. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WHY do universities have to prove that overseas students are actually attending the university? Why is this so critical?

      Anyone signed onto a course gets a student visa. After staying for 5 years they can apply for permanent residency. Because of this there are plenty of people with a very basic, or no, education who sign up to courses they never attend as a way to get permanent residency in the UK and the benefits that go with it.

      Now if someone genuinely spends 5 years in education they are an asset to the country and should be allowed to stay. If they know nothing and just want free stuff from the state that's not OK.

      Have you read the rules on the UKBA ?
      As the law stands, student visas do not count towards the 5 year rule . At the moment, you need to have a Tier-1 Visa to start your 5 year period toward settlement. These are dependent on income earned in the UK or income invested from abroad in the UK.
      I know the hysteria being whipped up about immigration of non-EU people, but please read through the immigration rules freely available on the on the UKBA website before you believe tabloid hysteria

    27. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are gangs of mostly Indian criminals who use those rules for trafficking people into the UK. There is a big gap between the rules as written and what actually happens. The criminals know all the loopholes and visa scams. These gangs don't even see themselves as criminals, they think they are helping people out ( for a fee, naturally. ) They used to run fake colleges. They still run fake companies, they know who to bribe to issue Indian passports so anyone who is deported can come back with a new name a week later. They pull anything and everything to game the UK visa and benefits systems.

    28. Re:Border checkpoints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are gangs of mostly Indian criminals who use those rules for trafficking people into the UK. There is a big gap between the rules as written and what actually happens. The criminals know all the loopholes and visa scams. These gangs don't even see themselves as criminals, they think they are helping people out ( for a fee, naturally. ) They used to run fake colleges. They still run fake companies, they know who to bribe to issue Indian passports so anyone who is deported can come back with a new name a week later. They pull anything and everything to game the UK visa and benefits systems.

      Surely that means shutting down the fake colleges and companies and prosecuting those who have gamed the system (with evidence admissible in a court of law obviously). Why should Newcastle university pull big-brother on everyone to cover up for UKBA ?

      International ( i.e. non-EU) students are not allowed to obtain any form of benefit (the various benefits disallowed are clearly specified) . It is also very clearly marked on the visa stamp (in their passport) or on their biometric-card. ( I have seen both from friends of various nationalities in university). This should be the responsibility of the local authority that checks the documentation before approving payment of benefits.

      All the issues about fake identities/ passport-visa fraud are a police / UKBA matter . Newcastle university I think should concentrate on teaching

  4. Who cares if I attend lectures? by Snotnose · · Score: 2

    This always bothered me. Tell me what the homework is and when the tests are. Let me decide if your lectures are worth attending.

    When I was a student I noticed the only professors who cared about attendance were the ones who couldn't teach worth a damn.

    1. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I was at university in the UK relatively recently (graduated in 2008). It was made clear when I started that the only compulsory attendance part of my course were the weekly tutorials (small groups of 3-4 students and a professor). Lectures and virtually all lab practicals were optional (there were probably half a dozen that counted towards the course mark, and thus they were compulsory as they were technically exams).
      Of course, it was made clear that realistically, you should be attending all of them, but they weren't *compulsory*. No attendance was taken at any point.

      Newcastle University is just one university in the UK; there are some who do things just fine in what I would consider perfectly sensible.

    2. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by vmlemon · · Score: 1

      Now, universities will request that students sign a register for every session - unless the lecturer has explicitly said that a session is optional. (I'm a 2nd year, undergraduate CS student at the University of Bradford).

    3. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Bengie · · Score: 1

      I think the only classes I ever had that had required attendance was higher 300+ classes when you had team projects.

      When I went to my state Uni, if a class was not full, you could sit in on lectures, just don't be asking questions, consume resources like hand-outs, or otherwise disrupt the class.

    4. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Xugumad · · Score: 5, Interesting

      From my point of view (as a non-academic who works on improving university administration), it matters for a few key reasons:

      1. Students who don't turn up to lectures are more likely to drop out of university. This particularly goes for students whose attendance was good and tails off, so we want to spot them early on and ask if they need any help (academic or personal).

      2. If a student turns up mid-way through semester with problems, we're inclined to be a lot more sympathetic (and devote more staff time to helping) if you've attended class. If you didn't attend class and then don't know the material, it could be argued that's rather your own fault.

    5. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      All students must give a blood and fingerprint sample while attending Gattaca. We can't have undesirables with their tainted, "natural" genes populating our higher halls of learning.
       
      Please re-read your brochure for further details of our purity guarantee.
       
      With love from big brother.

    6. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I had one biology professor who had all the test questions from his lecture. Why I bought the fucking expensive ass book I don't know but there was not one question out of the expensive fucker, everything was from the lectures. People who attended the lectures actually sold cassette tapes of it to people who didn't want to show up. (cassette was the thing back then) He never once checked attendance.

    7. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Students who don't turn up to lectures are more likely to drop out of university. This particularly goes for students whose attendance was good and tails off, so we want to spot them early on and ask if they need any help (academic or personal).

      No, we don't. University students are adults, and it's not our responsibility to hold their hands. If they need help, they need to seek that help. If conversely they're partying too much and not managing their time correctly, and as a result fail classes and/or drop out, hey, it's their money and they can spend it however they want. What they get out of the university is up to them.

      2. If a student turns up mid-way through semester with problems, we're inclined to be a lot more sympathetic (and devote more staff time to helping) if you've attended class. If you didn't attend class and then don't know the material, it could be argued that's rather your own fault.

      We've got class time and office hours. During those times, it's our job to provide help, regardless of whether they've been to class or not. Outside of those hours, it's at our discretion, but I'm personally not biased against people based on whether they show up to class or not, and I'll be glad to help anyone who cares enough to try to understand it on their own and then show up with questions. Yes, if they haven't shown up to class, you can argue it's their fault, but this isn't about placing "fault", it's about helping them learn. In fact, it can be argued that not showing up to class until you need help with the material is just good time management.

      When I was an undergraduate, I remember that I attended my DSP class six times. Twice the first week, three exams, and one final. I had a certain aptitude for that material, and I was able to follow the book myself fairly easily. I placed my homework on the desk before the professor got there whenever it was due. It would have been a waste of time to actually attend the lecture. With many other courses, I followed that process until getting to a point where things were not immediately obvious, and then I'd attend class to see what was going on, until I was caught up.

    8. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      University is a first step to independence for a lot of people. Not everyone gets that right first time. Students are absolutely paying for their education but they're also paying for someone to give a damn enough to make sure they get the most out of it.

      Do you honestly think things are better when people are left entirely to fend for themselves? Shame you're parents didn't kick you out into the woods the day you were born. You would probably have made more of yourself.

    9. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      University is a first step to independence for a lot of people. Not everyone gets that right first time.

      Right. People need to learn about the consequences of fucking up so they can get it right the next time.

      Students are absolutely paying for their education but they're also paying for someone to give a damn enough to make sure they get the most out of it.

      Yes, they are. But they're not paying for babysitters. This is what I mean by my willingness to help out if they put in the effort, whether they've been showing to class or not.

      Do you honestly think things are better when people are left entirely to fend for themselves? Shame you're parents didn't kick you out into the woods the day you were born. You would probably have made more of yourself.

      I think there's a pretty big difference between people who are not capable of taking care of themselves and people who choose to do things that I may perceive as unwise. When you become an adult you get the freedom to start making those decisions for yourself. The university, your employer, or whoever else has no right to try to run your life and make those decisions in your stead.

    10. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Students who don't turn up to lectures are more likely to drop out of university.

      Perhaps, but correlation does not imply causation.

      I appreciate the desire to help and the concern over someone who attended well at first but not later, but it's not worth much unless someone in authority will act on honest responses like "Sure, because the lecturer was awful and I wasn't learning anything useful there".

      If you didn't attend class and then don't know the material, it could be argued that's rather your own fault.

      It could be, but only if you take it as an axiom that the lectures would have taught that material effectively. That's a huge and IME entirely absurd assumption.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    11. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      You know what? I agree. I was one of those weird didn't-know-what-he-should-do students, and I probably would have benefited much more if anyone at my gigantic University had given a damn.
      As it is, my memory of my time there is a haze of being one statistic in a sea of others, with the occasional professor calling me an idiot.
      And yes, non attendance and other issue weret my fault. But I still think it could have been minimized.

    12. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      From my point of view (as a non-academic who works on improving university administration), it matters for a few key reasons:

      1. Students who don't turn up to lectures are more likely to drop out of university. This particularly goes for students whose attendance was good and tails off, so we want to spot them early on and ask if they need any help (academic or personal).

      As someone who actually has taught at the university level, I think work completion and grades are a much better indicator than lecture attendance. If a student disappears from my class for a couple weeks, but the work keeps being turned in, I'm generally not concerned.

      If the student begins to miss assignments or tests, there's much more likely to be an actual issue, and I will immediately try to contact the student.

      I think you're measuring the wrong thing here. You'll only catch a lot problem students with "attendance nets" in courses where professors don't assign regular work or give regular assessments... and in that case, the problem often likes more with the professor's issues than the students'.

      2. If a student turns up mid-way through semester with problems, we're inclined to be a lot more sympathetic (and devote more staff time to helping) if you've attended class. If you didn't attend class and then don't know the material, it could be argued that's rather your own fault.

      Umm, it IS?!? Seriously, that's part of what being an adult is about. If you are failing a class because you didn't attend and didn't do any work, it IS your fault -- there is no "it could be argued..." about it.

      This kind of nonsense is a huge problem in higher education today. Sure, a university should ensure that you have a decent advisor to guide you toward good choices in courses and perhaps a resident advisor if you're in a dorm to check in here and there.

      But if you don't do the work, YOU FAIL. End of story. Students need to be allowed to make choices, and if they can't be bothered to take a minimum amount of responsibility for barely trying, why the heck are you trying to protect them?

      If the concern is that parents or students will sue you or some sort of nonsense, I'd advocate that a university make students and parents sign a release form saying that academic grades are entirely up to the discretion of the faculty and failure to do required work will result in failure. If a student doesn't get that, perhaps he/she isn't ready to go to college... or perhaps college just isn't for him/her.

      To try to pretend otherwise is just going to lead to a society of people who have to be nannied around the clock in their jobs and every other aspect of their lives. Those aren't the kind of people who deserve a university degree.

      University administrators these days seem to fall over backwards to recruit high-caliber students. What they unfortunately don't seem as interested in is whether they are graduating high-caliber students. This business model will ultimately come back to haunt schools when the reputation of their graduates declines.

    13. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      You know what? I agree. I was one of those weird didn't-know-what-he-should-do students, and I probably would have benefited much more if anyone at my gigantic University had given a damn.

      I think this is a different issue from what this thread was originally about. I could be wrong, but I don't think anyone here has argued that we should adopt a model where no one in the faculty or administration "gives a damn" about the students.

      Rather, the question is whether attendance is a reasonable metric to address that issue. I have heard many, many stories from people who lined up in their pajamas to sign an attendance sheet and then went back to their dorm room bed. I know many more who actually did the required work, delivered the required assignments, and left immediately after (before lecture) because they found class worthless. Are attendance records helping those students?

      If we want to avoid "lost" students, I'd say there are a few dozen recommendations I'd put in place before making some sort of mandatory attendance recording policy. For starters, encourage better advisors and advising. Get better supervisors in dorms. Require more frequent check-ins for these people with each student. Have more staff (both teaching and resident) available in a variety of venues and situations that different types of students might feel comfortable with. Etc.

      These sorts of things generally would cost time and money. Most of them would cost more than some sort of attendance policy. But they would also have a chance of actually being effective.

      I absolutely agree with you that universities shouldn't just let students get lost without providing reasonable opportunities for good advice and guidance from some faculty or staff people. But looking for an attendance policy to solve this problem is not actually giving you the thing you requested. They may have meticulous records of your attendance (or non-attendance), but that's not necessarily the first step toward caring about students.

    14. Re:Who cares if I attend lectures? by Kijori · · Score: 1

      The people who need help are also often the ones who are going to struggle to seek help. University students are adults, but barely - in the UK people mostly go to university at 18. For many it will be their first time away from home and they will be at the other end of the country from their friends and family. For a lot of students it's the first time they come out as gay, which can be very tough, or the first time they have a serious relationship.
      If a student wants to sit at home rather than go to class then I say fair enough - in fact if they're not doing the work I would prefer that they stay away rather than slow the whole class down. But I do think that the university should try to identify those students who aren't coping and who need extra help. It doesn't have to be an inquisition or a punishment. When I was at university our attendance was monitored for exactly the reasons the GP mentioned - a particular memory of mine is that it meant that when a classmate had a breakdown the university found out and helped her. There were also plenty of people who just didn't turn up, but as long as they passed their exams nothing happened to them (bar the odd comment from the lecturer) as a result.

  5. Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will they also be given some Colgate 5000 ppm fluoride toothpaste?

  6. Summary, summarized by feedayeen · · Score: 3, Informative

    The UK is concerned that some of their international students are illegally working. Their reasoning is that school and work are mutually exclusive so if you are in school you are not working and vise versa. This is flawed reasoning.

    1. Re:Summary, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that flawed. I've known quite a few students on student visas, especially in some of the technology courses, who had gotten superb state funded educations and worked during time they should have been attending class or studying in the US. I even knew some who built computers in the US and were paid under the table, fairly competent, too: it was how the company was keeping desktop computers priced so low.

  7. why have a college GED as well or at least spilt o by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    why have a college GED as well or at least split off the gen edu stuff.

    And they you have also have REAL tech / trades schools with none of the gen edus in them.

  8. Coming soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    A new unofficial Student service to sell you latex gloves with 'someone else's' fingerpints embedded in the fingers.
    Available in any of the Pubs that sell Newcastle Brown around the University.

    being serious for a moment,
    If it is the UKBA demanding this then I guess that if you are a British citizen you can stick two finger(prints) up at them. IMHO, demanding this sort of thing from UK Citizens is the sort of thing that would get them sued pretty quickly. There is no legal requirement to have any form of ID in the UK.

    1. Re:Coming soon by lgw · · Score: 1

      I keep mis-reading this agency as the UKGB - or maybe that's not a mistake.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:Coming soon by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

      There is no legal requirement to have any form of ID in the UK.

      Not correct if you are a foreigner, or work in a 'sensitive' job.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_document#United_Kingdom

      Also, try buying alcohol, or driving a car etc. without ID. A while ago I was in England, and I was asked to prove my age when buying alcohol, (I'm 50, and I look it...hilarious...)

    3. Re:Coming soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like whoever asked you for ID was a bit of a wally. I'm only 29, and haven't had to show ID in about a decade. And the police over here don't care about ID when driving.

  9. the old college system needs change going on line by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    the old college system needs change going on line for lectures classes is a good start and can work to cut costs and let people take there time in more the core classes.

  10. Re:Summary, summarized, analyzed by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The UK is concerned that some of their international students are illegally working.

    If international student visa abuse is the problem . . . then why are they proposing to monitor the attendance of ALL students . . . ? Methinks they are planning to use this for something else in the future . . .

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  11. makes sense by tobiah · · Score: 1

    can't expect them all to know how to sign their names.

    --
    "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  12. DISNEY WORLD by Bananatree3 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Disney World has been quietly requiring fingerprint scans for certain parts of the park: http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_columnist_mikethomas/2007/05/finger_scanners.html

    While it seems new for school attendance, non-financial biometric scans are not new...

    1. Re:DISNEY WORLD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disney's system is actually bone density, not fingerprint.... they do it because the tickets are non-transferable. You can choose to show your ID instead if you like.

    2. Re:DISNEY WORLD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://allears.net/pl/fingerscan.htm
      These people seem pretty knowledgeable about it... looks like it is a dumbed down version of fingerprints.

    3. Re:DISNEY WORLD by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

      Interesting link! Doesn't mention anything about bone density, but it mentions that it computes a specific "geometric ID" that's linked to one's finger print but isn't an exact fingerprint scan...something that has a low statistical probability of being replicated in short amount of time.

  13. Re:Summary, summarized, analyzed by Roderic9 · · Score: 1

    If international student visa abuse is the problem . . . then why are they proposing to monitor the attendance of ALL students . . . ? Methinks they are planning to use this for something else in the future . . .

    Quite correct. They are following the same logic as has been used in the past to justify the introduction of identity cards. If they get away with this one, we'll see ID cards return to the agenda.

  14. Why do they need finger print scanning? by qzzpjs · · Score: 0

    They should just use RFID based card keys like everyone else does in the business world. It's a lot faster to tap a card against a reader at a door than to stand there an scan your print which might take 10 seconds or more. It's probably a lot cheaper to implement too. Granted, someone could get a friend to log them in for attendance, but is that really a problem? As long as the student has paid for their classes, why should the university care what the kid does. If they want to skip classes and fail, that's the student's problem.

    1. Re:Why do they need finger print scanning? by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      Because in the UK, a lot of the bill isn't funded by the student, it's funded by the taxpayers.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    2. Re:Why do they need finger print scanning? by qzzpjs · · Score: 0

      Okay, that makes some sense. I'm thinking though that maybe they can provide an alternate incentive for attendance if the government is paying a portion of the tuition. Perhaps a required grade point average or score that the student must achieve. If the student doesn't achieve it, they should be forced to repay the taxpayers in part or full. I know that I would have studied harder...

      Either way, I think they should avoid biometrics for identification. I know the current systems don't really store your actual fingerprint in the database so it's not a security or privacy issue, but it still seems they could make it simpler by using cards. We have fingerprint scanners at my office for the server rooms and it takes a good 10 seconds use the thing. If you have hundreds of students trying to get into a room, half will always be late because of the lineup.

    3. Re:Why do they need finger print scanning? by realxmp · · Score: 2

      Because in the UK, a lot of the bill isn't funded by the student, it's funded by the taxpayers.

      Not for overseas students they pay the whole whack.

    4. Re:Why do they need finger print scanning? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me?!

      I was given a loan for tuition fees (Scottish system) - but it was far from interest free and took me 5 years of very well paid employment to pay all 5 years tuition back - many of my friends from the same course are still paying theirs back now (7 years and counting). There is also a £2k cost just for graduating - apparently to fund the system.

      As far as I understand it, the English system simply asks you to actually pay that amount every year - an amount that is now closer to £5K up to £9K a year.

      So exactly what part of the UK system is actually funded by taxpayers? Where isn't it paid for by the students directly, or via loans that are actually funded by the previous batch of students?!

    5. Re:Why do they need finger print scanning? by cornjones · · Score: 1

      Right, so you took 5 years to pay back for an education that will benefit you for some 50 years of life. seems like a no brainer.

      Besides, you don't seriously think it only costs 9k/student to run a university, do you? Think of how many people you interact with, teachers and staff, grounds, facilities. I ran across this infographic on Univ of Alaska. Presumably their heating bills (and maybe staff retention) are higher than most but I would expect this to be indicative of any institution. http://www.uafsunstar.com/archives/10184. Given roughly 35k students at that institution, that comes to about 24k / student / year.

      another good article along the same lines is here; http://www.topuniversities.com/studying-abroad/advice/how-much-does-it-really-cost-study-us

      Truthfully, i don't understand what the griping about the 9k/year rates is about. this is taken in the form of a loan from teh government which doesn't need to be paid back until you have a good job. Basically, the society is making a bet that each student will be successful. If the student is successful, they have to pay back that loan. If the student isn't successful, they don't pay it back and the state eats the cost. this seems completely reasonable for the state to take the risk and for the student to pay back if it works.

  15. Who is paying whom? by jenningsthecat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Although I abhor the practice of compulsory biometric tracking, in the case of employees I can at least see some small justification for it, because employees receive paycheques in exchange for adhering to their employers' rules.

    But when an institution to which I am paying money for a service wants my fingerprints so they can track me, they can just fuck right off. And the government too, for that matter. Brits ought to be calling loudly for the heads of the decision makers on this one.

    Although I believe it often goes too far, I'll admit the need for some kind of immigration monitoring and enforcement. But when that monitoring turns ordinary innocent citizens into the subjects of invasive surveillance, it's time to draw the line. This is 'death by a thousand cuts' stuff, and what's being cut and killed is our very freedom. This shit has to stop.

    --
    'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    1. Re:Who is paying whom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The truth can not be modded down, you proud down-modding Brits.

    2. Re:Who is paying whom? by westlake · · Score: 1

      But when an institution to which I am paying money for a service wants my fingerprints so they can track me, they can just fuck right off. And the government too, for that matter.

      This assumes you are paying all costs up-front with no loans, grants, or subsides of any kind to you or to your school. It is far more likely, I suspect, that a great many people have very good reasons for holding your feet to the fire.

      People who will want to know if you they have invested in you wisely.

      That your grades are living up to expectations. That you are making reasonable progress towards a degree.

      The campus is not your private playground.

      You do not have unlimited --- unconditional --- access to the grounds, facilities or services.

      You can be required to show ID.

      I can't think of a single public or private employer whose physical facilities are on the same scale as a college or university campus that doesn't play by the same rules.

    3. Re:Who is paying whom? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      People who will want to know if you they have invested in you wisely.

      That your grades are living up to expectations. That you are making reasonable progress towards a degree.

      This is why there are exams and coursework. This is why you hand in assignments that test your knowledge of the subject, ability to research and ability to present cogent arguments.

      None of this requires you to attend lectures.

      The campus is not your private playground.

      Indeed. It's a playground you share with other young attractive people with similar interests and the same sense of adventure.

      There's a reason people get an education at University, and it's rarely the lectures.

    4. Re:Who is paying whom? by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      When I was at uni (middlesex university), every lecture and class had a register you had to sign. If you didn't sign most registers, you'd fail the course (regardless of how you did in exams or coursework).

      People throw around "scary" buzzwords like biometrics but in practice this is no different from something a lot of British unis have had in place for a long time. It's just a harder system to cheat.

  16. Lost priorities by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    What the hell is wrong with a university when it is so rudderless that it feels that one ounce of effort should be directed toward immigration control? If illegal immigration is causing some sort of problem for the university that is interfering with their core mandate of teaching students then yes get all over that. But if this is a paper pusher problem where some people are signing up for a third rate university to get a visa and then booking it then who cares. The university could just provide transcripts to the border people for their foreign students and let the government deal with it.

    But even for their domestic students who gives a crap if a student attends a lecture; this is the 21st century and any modern educational institution should be providing a video or audio lecture for students anyway. I recently was watching a Stanford lecture series on iTunes where the classroom had around 20 regular attendees with well over 200 students signed up. The professor made frequent references to those students in their bunny slippers. So if a university is taking the opposite approach than Stanford University they would need pretty extraordinary evidence to prove to me that they are heading in the correct direction and not in the exact wrong direction.

    If, as a parent, this joke of an institution were on my children's list of candidate universities I would explain to my kids that this was a really bad sign and that they should not consider the place. Luckily for my kids we live far away and have far better choices.

    1. Re:Lost priorities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No university exists in a vacuum. When they accept federal money for housing costs, medical care for the students, building costs, and to ease tuition costs, they're a paying customer of the university and have the ability to make binding costs to ensure that the money is used as expected. Since the government issues the student visas and work visas, student visas are often longer than work visas, and student visas obtain national medical coverage and family assistance for student spouses and children, it can be a considerable investment. If that student is then working, instead, they're also working illegally and often being paid in ways difficult to monitor and trace, and they also tend to ignore the annual taxes and leave with the money.

      I actually knew several Polish students in London who did *precisely* this. One of the bastards still ows me 200 pounds of poker money. (Music student, not a math major.....)

    2. Re:Lost priorities by benjfowler · · Score: 1

      Universities in the UK have been told by the UK Border Agency, that it's their legal responsibility to ensure that they and their students are complying with the law. Failure to do so, means that they lose their license to bring in highly-profitable foreign students.

      London Metropolitan University had very poor controls, and some foreign students were scamming the system, and the UKBA busted them. They got to be the example -- and now they have the dubious distinction of being viciously kneecapped financially by the government as a consequence. They're now busy fighting for their financial lives in the High Court.

      (I know people intimately familiar with the situation.)

    3. Re:Lost priorities by mrbester · · Score: 1

      "They're now busy fighting for their financial lives in the High Court."

      As they should. Universities are not a non-executive agency of UKBA. Neither are businesses and similar "legal obligations" as defined by UKBA, whispered into the paranoid ear of a Home Secretary and whipped through Parliament are rife.

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
  17. Universal Studios by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Certain lockers at Universal Studios Hollywood use fingerprinting for locking and unlocking lockers.

  18. [citation needed] by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

    Says who? You?

  19. Remember: the students are the EMPLOYERS by petes_PoV · · Score: 2
    The students pay the fees that keep the staff in jobs. It seems bizarre that they should be the ones who should be tracked.

    If anything, the lecturers and academics should be the ones who have to sign in and prove they are doing the work the students are paying them for.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:Remember: the students are the EMPLOYERS by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      Customers, technically, but anyway...

      We do not have a general policy of failing students for not attending most lectures. There are exceptions; if you're doing Chemistry and completely fail to attend a safety briefing (I believe they're all either routinely repeated or can be repeated if there's a good reason why a student was absent), for example, that can basically be degree ending right there (you cannot be allowed into the lab, so cannot do coursework). There are similar examples in most sciences and Medicine.

      What we're talking about is fulfilling a legal requirement in one case, and helping us manage resources in another (by providing additional assistance to students most likely to benefit from it).

    2. Re:Remember: the students are the EMPLOYERS by lgw · · Score: 1

      That's a very US point of view (and I admire it), but in many places college is "free" (paid for by taxpayers or bad loans), which puts the students in a less nice place.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    3. Re:Remember: the students are the EMPLOYERS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..and tax money is used, so please, they are not the employers.

  20. Re:Summary, summarized, analyzed by 1s44c · · Score: 1

    If international student visa abuse is the problem . . . then why are they proposing to monitor the attendance of ALL students . . . ?

    Because anything else could be seen as racist.

  21. They're about 15 years behind the times by benjfowler · · Score: 1

    I worked once, as a checkout chump in Australia's biggest supermarket chain.

    They were having a hell of a time with people bunking off work and having their mates sign them in. So they implemented a biometric signin system, where you signed on and off by typing in your number and scanning your fingerprint.

    Problem solved. I think our union went apeshit for a while, until they realized that it cut both ways -- that rock solid evidence of hours worked meant managers couldn't unfairly dock peoples' pay, and then it was a non-issue.

    Given the advantages I've seen of biometric systems to prevent dishonesty, and the limited scope for abuse (my fingerprint hashes are currently useless to a crook wanting to make easy money), I need to be convinced that this is somehow a problem privacy-wise.

    1. Re:They're about 15 years behind the times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's nice... glad it worked out for you, but the internet has proven to be unsecure and I believe it's problematic, using biometrics in order to ensure attendance. I"m wary of the possibility that hacked biometric information has far more dire consequences than other identifying information which can be changed in the event that it's hacked or stolen.

      On top of which, the purpose of school is to provide access to educational opportunities for which the students pay. As a paying customer, why would I want to be treated like I'm in look-down? For those who receive grant funding, I'm sure there are less expensive, less ridiculous ways of ascertaining attendance. Treating students, especially adult students, like children should be unacceptable.

      The Brits are far to interested in creating police state conditions.

    2. Re:They're about 15 years behind the times by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      They were having a hell of a time with people bunking off work and having their mates sign them in. So they implemented a biometric signin system, where you signed on and off by typing in your number and scanning your fingerprint.

      After it was implemented, what was stopping the habitual slackers from showing up twice a day (to log in and out), and being absent in between?

    3. Re:They're about 15 years behind the times by benjfowler · · Score: 0

      Department managers have to manage their budgets, and that includes labour. They get detailed breakdowns of who's supposed to be working when, and supervise their own people; anomalies are picked up very fast. For checkout operators, attendance (I _think_), was correlated with checkout sign-in activity.

      This place, hiring minimum-wage labour, tended to be a low-trust, highly-controlled, highly-regulated workplace, as all these places tend to be.

    4. Re:They're about 15 years behind the times by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 1

      You were mandated to go to work to be paid and keep your job. One is usually not mandated to go to class that they pay for. And it isn't the university's business what I do with the time I have lectures scheduled.

      I am an engineer, and skipped probably a third of my classes. Not because I was lazy, but because there were far more efficient things to do with my time (like homework/projects). If the UK did biometrics for people with student visas, that would be one thing. Doing it for everyone is asinine.

      --
      while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    5. Re:They're about 15 years behind the times by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      Fingerprint information is probably much less harmful than your signature or even an employee ID number getting leaked out.

  22. Re:why have a college GED as well or at least spil by xelah · · Score: 1

    Newcastle University almost certainly DOESN'T have them. It's not typical in the UK.

  23. Damn those immigrants! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coming here! Stealing our facts!

  24. A pass is all that matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares if students attend lectures or not? All that should matter is whether they pass or not. I missed many of my university lectures yet passed with a first class honors degree.

  25. bunking off? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If such a system were put in place at my university I would consider intentionally avoiding all lectures and instead learn from books. If for some weird reason lecture attendance were mandatory I'd drop out. If the system were in place from the start I wouldn't apply for a place.

    Having said that, I might accept a transparent society experiment where ALL people on campus could by tracked by EVERYONE. It might even be a good idea to have most people experience this once in their lives.

  26. Yep by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

    And what they really want to do is to take that finger print and look up everything you've ever done and like. Then they will capture all the data and well you sleep install tracking id tags into your bodies. As you then walk around the university they will target advertising at you. This will then expand to installing cameras at the desks so you can be watched at all times, you'll be required to be tapped non stop. This isn't far enough yet, the government will come in and start using you like cattle, you'll be turned in a feed for other other humans, placed in a pen and eat grass well you are branded and brain washed to become nothing more then a piece of meat!!!! HOW CAN THEY DO THIS!!!!



    Or..... they just want to make it easier to tell when students are there.

  27. Re:Summary, summarized, analyzed by Cederic · · Score: 1

    How so?

    I mean, the British people attending the university will be from multiple race and the International students will be from multiple races too. There will be a strong (potentially 100%) overlap in the races from each group.

    So checking the International students wouldn't even be racism by circumstance, let alone intentional racism.

  28. UK don't go the way of our conservatives by rastoboy29 · · Score: 0

    Dear UK,

    You are one of my favorite countries, due to the inevitability of being familiar with you culture to some extent when one is a reader of words in the English language, and an enjoyer of the spoken version as well.

    Please, please, don't let your right wing turn into ours.  It sucks.  They are no longer useful people.  You've got your own civil liberties issues without adding the does of insanity which seems to be de rigeur with our right wingnuts, now.

  29. scan by ron+raw · · Score: 1

    while I am waiting in line for the finger print scanner the person in front of me is spending a vigorous amount of time picking their nose . They scan with boogers. Now my turn no work or press boogers wonderfull

  30. Useless? Hacked 5 years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least 5 years ago, middle school students in Australia had 'technology class' complete with finger print readers so that kids don't duck class. The super ultra uber high technology finger print readers forced the kids to be at class all the time. There was no getting around that the system cannot be fooled. ... except, you know, unless the kids use something like wrapping a gummy bear around their finger, then giving it to a friend (who had a dozen other gummy prints) and would sacrifice his time and log in to a dozen machines with his gummy forgery. DOH!

  31. Serious Over-Reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that the universities sponsor the overseas students for a visa. If enough go missing, they lose this ability, and the ability to take on overseas students. Overseas students pay roughhly 4x the amount a home student pays, so this is very important to universities.

    However, this is very serious, as students should only really have to show up to meetings to be signed in about once every 10 weeks, by the UKBA's latest guidelines. Most universities are going above and beyond this to meet the requirements. For instance, an institution I know of is requring meetings at least once a month. Requiring fingerprint sign in to a part of the course which tratitionally was optional is a very major step up, and is a serious invasion of the student's privacy.

  32. Re:Summary, summarized, analyzed by mustrum_ridcully · · Score: 1

    I suspect the real reason for this might be the introduction of £9,000 ($14,000) pa tuition fees plus the rise of the "helicopter parent" and a US-style litigation culture in the UK. By using a system such as the one proposed they'll be able to keep a record of who attends and if they are sued for breach of contract (or something similar) when little Jimmy doesn't pass his exams they can turn around and say (with confidence) that he never turned up to lectures. Government visa controls are probably being used as a scapegoat.

  33. Background by cardpuncher · · Score: 2

    Just a bit of background to set the context for this.

    English* Universities depend very heavily on the income from overseas students as the total funding from English students (fees + government grants) does not, allegedly, meet the costs of the education provided. It's also now the only growth area for student recruitment (applications from English students were down around 10% this year as fees have risen steeply). The last I heard, Newcastle University was building on its campus a college for overseas students of 16+ to improve recruitment rates to the University itself for those same students when they reached 18.

    The current government, on the other hand, is committed to substantially reducing immigration levels which it is finding very hard to do - the Eurozone financial situation means that immigration from Europe is increasing (and EU treaties require the free movement of people) and clamping down on overseas students is seen as an easy short-term win. There's been a big argument between Universities and the government about whether students should count in the immigration figures at all (since most of them leave at the end of their courses) which was resolved only in September (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/immigration/9541141/Foreign-students-to-be-marked-out-in-immigration-figures.html) with a compromise which keeps student numbers under very close review.

    Universities fear increasingly tight controls on studying in the UK might dissuade students from enrolling and are increasingly starting to open overseas campuses (http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=415018) which have the potential additional benefit of tapping the market for those who don't have the resources to relocate for their education. There is talk in some institutions that serving UK students may become an incidental consequence of their academic activities rather than an institutional goal.

    It's in the midst of this ongoing policy shift - withdrawing government money from universities then encouraging them to make it up overseas and then tightening up on student visas - that Universities find themselves trapped. They need the money, so they need the visas, so they have to do what the governnment requires to get them. And while government funding for undergraduates may no longer be significant, Univeristies still depend heavily on government funding for their postgraduate programmes, which is where they get their reputations from. So don't expect any crusades from the moral high ground.

    *Somewhat different situation in Scotland and Wales

  34. This is phase 2: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The militarisation of education. Along with calls to arm teachers in primary schools, this mindset shows that civility and society are no longer valued in western nations.

  35. Why do they want the herd to stand in a choke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    point? With all the killing and the fact the UK is disarmed of anything effective some nut with weed killer sprayer full of gasoline could end you. It's not about attendance or immigration or safety it's about control. The more they can herd you where they want the happier the control freaks will be.

  36. Attendance or admittance? by kenh · · Score: 1

    How does a system that tracks student attendance help keep illegal aliens out of classes? Answer - it doesn't, an admittance system does.

    This system is really designed to admit ONLY registered students into lectures, the attendance taking part is a by-product.

    The school doesn't care if paying students attend classes, they care about those that aren't paying filling up the classroom.

    --
    Ken
  37. presence of mind by froth-bite · · Score: 1

    a human touches a machine interface and is known by their fingerprint. how would a robot be uniquely indentified by humans?

    --
    In NSA America social networks join you!
  38. Rubber fingers by Keith+Henson · · Score: 1

    I can see it now, student with a ring of rubber fingers signing in a mess of students to a video lecture.

    --
    End MGM. Get prospective parents of boys to Google: Men do complain
  39. Re:Summary, summarized, analyzed by jabuzz · · Score: 1

    I used to work for one of the top departments in the university if question (Newcastle University). This was five years ago and even then registers at the start of all lectures, practicals and tutorials. Miss a handful and you would be asked to visit the head of school to explain your absence. If you where sick you where expected to hand in sick notes. The school was one of only a couple doing that.

    The school in question had the lowest drop out and the lowest failure rate in the University. It therefore comes as no surprise to me that they have decided to widen the scope to the whole University.