Image: Coventry City Council / flickr

Sent to Coventry: Has the University failed over a thousand freshers?

In a recent piece detailing Warwick’s various campus accommodations, I described halls as “undoubtedly the best place to live in your first year”. When writing those words, I did not anticipate the possibility that they would ring hollow for over 1,000 incoming freshers.

I’m talking, of course, about the news that the University, in its infinite wisdom, has allocated a significant number of freshers to private accommodation in Coventry city centre. For the students who picked Warwick for its campus atmosphere and localised accommodation, this was undoubtedly a major gut-punch. Freshers have not only been mis-sold but are now starting their time at Warwick on a sour note.

Additionally, some students claim they remain in the dark about where exactly they’ll be living, and with little information available, they cannot plan for the year ahead, let alone look forward to it. Moreover, those freshers seeking leafy campus life and hoping to avoid the hectic, metropolitan world of big city universities have now been dumped in the centre of Coventry, one of the country’s most unpopular urban areas. They have literally been sent to Coventry.

Many clearing students expect not to be prioritised regarding accommodation, yet the University has failed to take advantage of this. This perceived unfairness has rubbed salt in the wound of firm-choice students and left them feeling understandably slighted

Now, hundreds will be robbed of many of the experiences that make the first year at a campus university so great. Surely, this issue cannot have come as a surprise to the University, yet they appear frustratingly apathetic. For one, the reported evasiveness with which the University has dealt with this, as they lean on their website’s promise of ‘university-allocated accommodation’, instead of ‘campus accommodation’, feels insincere and downright slimy.

The absence of Whitefields this year, alongside much of Westwood and some of Claycroft, was somehow all part of the University’s plan; unfortunately, it clearly happened to be a terrible plan that involved abandoning hundreds of freshers in Coventry.

To worsen matters, Warwick’s random allocation system does not give extra consideration to those who chose Warwick as a firm choice, providing equal opportunity to those who came through clearing. Many clearing students expect not to be prioritised regarding accommodation, yet the University has failed to take advantage of this. This perceived unfairness has rubbed salt in the wound of firm-choice students and left them feeling understandably slighted.

This will undoubtedly have a huge impact on students’ lives as they’re left detached from the hectic, fun atmosphere of freshers on campus and forced to commute from Coventry

Furthermore, the slow process of accommodation allocation means freshers were unable to enter clearing after finding out their predicament, limiting their options and leading some to defer, delaying their lives by an entire year.

It is important to remember that our University was built in the middle of nowhere to avoid these very issues. However, despite being given plenty of room to build and plan accommodation while also residing outside of a big city, first years have ended up in private accommodation in the centre of Coventry – undermining two of the things that make Warwick a successful campus university. There’s no doubt that this failure will have a significant impact on Warwick’s reputation as an institution free from the accommodation woes of other major universities.

Any attempt to disregard these allocations as insignificant to the freshers’ experience is flawed; this will undoubtedly have a huge impact on students’ lives as they’re left detached from the hectic, fun atmosphere of freshers on campus and forced to commute from Coventry.

The University has clearly failed many of its incoming students

However, the situation certainly isn’t unsalvageable; most students live off campus in their second or third year and still have a fantastic time. Additionally, the perils of Coventry are largely overstated; most students live there and have extremely positive experiences. Finally, you will still be able to throw yourself into freshers’ activities, from circles to club nights to society events.

Although you may have a longer walk back to your accommodation, there are many ways to make this work, and, at the very least, you’ll be closer to Kasbah. Even so, the University has clearly failed many of its incoming students, all of whom are owed much more than this.

To any freshers reading this who have been affected and want to share their views, I would encourage you to check out The Boar Opinion’s Instagram page and get in contact, so we can help get your thoughts published.

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