FR EE
THE ONLY STUDENT NEWSPAPER WORTH READING DELIVERED TO YOUR CAMPUS F R E E!
unipaper unipaper.co.uk
GLASGOW EDITION May 2017
P24 Playing live should be like cave people dancing
P4
PEACE WITH PUPS Zen with man’s best friend
P11
WHALE OF A TIME Duo row across Atlantic
Protesters: End ‘harsh’ punishment
GRIME’S J HUS Tells us he’s a bit boring
ADVENTURE TIPS Explore the outdoors POP STAR DUA LIPA On her road to stardom
Students want stop to zero-marks policy JOHN SHAW
P19 P13
P19 P18
Campaigners are calling on their university to drop a ‘harsh’ zeromarks policy, which sees all late work automatically receive no grade. The University of Strathclyde’s students’ association wrote a letter to their humanities and social sciences faculty, which adopts the policy, calling on bosses to ban it. The online piece read: ‘We believe the zero-marks approach does not appropriately prepare students for the
workplace, as it encourages students to not submit work at all, should they have missed the set deadline. ‘Furthermore, this rigid policy disproportionately impacts working students and those from widening access backgrounds.’ The group wants the HASS department to revert to a progressive punitive policy, which saw late work punished at a rate of five marks per day, for five days, before applying a mark of zero – a position it dropped prior to the 2014/15 academic year. Robert Mclaren, a journalism
By imposing a strict penalty, the policy forces students to submit half-finished coursework Robert Mclaren, Strathclyde student
and politics student at Strathclyde, said: ‘By imposing a strict penalty, the policy forces students to submit half-finished coursework in order to achieve anything, rather than spending time perfecting their work at the price of a small deduction. In the past I’ve found myself submitting work I hadn’t even read – not because I was lazy, but because I’d tried to put as much effort into my work as possible and ran out of time.’ The University Paper has contacted Strathclyde for a comment but did not receive a reply before the deadline.
P23
NEWS | GOSS | COMMENT | MUSIC | FASHION | FOOD | YOUR LIFE | TECH | ON CAMPUS | GAMES | COMPETITIONS | FILM | SPORT | DIGS Before you start, you will need to know: • Your address, including the postcode • Your National Insurance Number. If you’ve lost it, go to www.gov.uk/lost-national-insurance-number • An email address you don’t mind being contacted on about your registration
WWW.GOV.UK/REGISTER-TO-VOTE
Why vote? In short, because what happens on June 8 will affect your life, whether you’re interested in party politics or not. On the day the general election was called, the largest group of people registering to vote was under-25s, raising the potential of this group to influence the outcome.
How to do it: Simply head to www.gov.uk/register-to-vote It usually takes about five minutes THE DEADLINE TO REGISTER IS MONDAY, MAY 22