British university fails 1,500 students

1500 students at the University of Liverpool, Britain, were prevented from celebrating their success and graduating, after they were surprised that their academic scores were "zero" despite their exams.


 To discover later that the


reason for the failure is not related to them, according to what was published by the British "Daily Mail" on Wednesday.

The British newspaper "Daily Mail" reported that the students are victims of a dispute between the academic staff at the university and its administration, which threatened a few days ago to sack more than 20 teachers and researchers.

 She considered them redundant, which prompted their colleagues at the university to organize a union strike to protest the dismissal plans, and to refuse to register the grades of hundreds of students who were preparing to graduate.

Undergraduate students at the university expressed their anger;

The current strike, involving more than 1,000 employees, threatens to hinder their access to work and delay opportunities to enroll in higher studies.


A Liverpool University spokesperson said: "We are working hard to mitigate the impact of the ongoing strike on our students, but unfortunately a small number of subjects


 are significantly affected due to the boycott of existing grades and assessment."

He stressed that the university contacted the students to inform them that there was a short delay in their results, expecting that the majority of students would receive their classification soon.

"We understand that this is frustrating for those affected students, but it is extremely important that additional time be allocated to processing these scores in line with the assessment's Code of Practice."

The university told the affected students that it would award them provisional grades based on average grades. She told some of them that they would have to wait for their results on July 12.