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<p>The government is aware of the disproportionate impact that the COVID-19 outbreak
will have on some students and it has already been working closely with the Office
for Students (OfS), the regulator of registered higher education providers in England,
so higher education providers can draw upon existing funding to provide hardship funds
and to support disadvantaged students affected by COVID-19.</p><p>As a result of this
flexibility, providers were able to use OfS student premium funding worth around £23
million per month for April to July this year. From August, providers have also been
able to use £256 million for the current academic year towards student hardship funds,
including for the purchase of IT equipment. We have also allocated £100 million to
support remote education, which has enabled the provision of routers and laptops to
vulnerable students, prioritising care-leavers, including those at university.</p><p>We
expect that higher education providers will be open for the autumn term, combining
online teaching and in-person tuition in ways that they consider appropriate and in
line with public health advice. On 10 September, the government issued updated guidance
to the higher education sector on reopening campuses and buildings.</p><p>The government’s
expectation is that quality and academic standards must be maintained, and the OfS
has made it clear that all higher education providers must continue to comply with
registration conditions relating to quality and standards, which set out requirements
to ensure that courses are high quality, that students are supported and achieve good
outcomes, and that standards are protected.</p><p>The OfS has published information
and guidance for providers and students, and the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher
Education has also published a series of guides to support providers to secure academic
standards and to support student achievement during the COVID-19 outbreak.</p><p>My
right hon. Friend, the Secretary of State of Education, has commissioned Sir Michael
Barber, the Chairman of the OfS, to lead a review to consider how to enhance the quality
of digital teaching and learning and the opportunities that digital education presents
for universities in the medium and long term. The review is expected to report in
spring 2021 and will also explore how higher education institutions can ensure that
all students have access to a high-quality digital teaching and learning experience.</p>
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