Attendance rates of UK university students have plummeted in the past two decades, according to a new longitudinal analysis of student satisfaction surveys, despite in-person interactions being consistently named a marker of a good academic experience. Policy analysts looked at 20 years’ worth of data collected for the annual Student Academic Experience Survey, currently run by the Higher Education Policy Institute and Advance HE, to establish key trends in a tumultuous period for higher education.

British university classroom: sparse attendance
The report, What Matters Most? 20 years of the student experience, notes that “the context for higher education has shifted significantly”, with the results spanning eight different prime ministers, a major expansion in student enrolments, and the rise in tuition fees from £3,000 per year to more than £9,000. The key findings were said to be “surprisingly simple”: “a good student academic experience ultimately comes down to quality teaching, access to in-person interaction with teachers and a strong sense of belonging”.
But a key trend over the period concerned students’ attendance on campus, with 63 percent of undergraduates attending all their scheduled classes in 2006, compared with just under 48 percent by 2025. The average time missed by all students has more than doubled, from about one hour per week in 2006 to 2.4 hours in 2025. However, when the figures in 2025 were isolated to just those who admitted to not attending all their classes, the average time missed was five hours — equal to one-third of their average total timetabled teaching time of 15 hours per week.
In general, views on whether courses are “value for money” have fluctuated over the years, with more than 60 percent agreeing in 2006, dropping to 37 percent in the most recent iteration. Dips in satisfaction were linked to increases in tuition fees, with perceived value for money falling between 2006 and 2007, following the tripling of fees in 2006, and further drops happening in 2012 following the introduction of £9,000 tuition fees and in 2021 amid the Covid pandemic.
The report notes that the rise in students doing paid work alongside their studies is another of the major shifts seen in the survey’s history, with the 2025 survey finding 68 percent of all students were in term-time employment, up from 35 percent in 2015. While attendance gaps have grown for all students, “it was largest for those in employment”.
However, the report says there may be more nuance to the figures since the pandemic, when many universities began uploading lectures online, meaning students can now “catch up on lectures online and there is less pressure to attend in person”. It concludes that the survey results from the past two decades show that “while higher education may change rapidly, what students need to succeed changes more slowly”.
Rose Stephenson, director of policy and strategy at Hepi and co-author of the report, says that amid sector “disruption and uncertainty”, it must “protect what matters most: high-quality teaching, meaningful in-person connection and a strong sense of community.”







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