Metadata
Title
Exceptional circumstances
Category
general
UUID
b9fe23936c394208b56968e5ef381984
Source URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/students/your-studies/exceptional-circumstances
Parent URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/students
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T05:24:43+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Exceptional circumstances

Source: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/students/your-studies/exceptional-circumstances Parent: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/students

The final deadlines for submitting exceptional circumstances applications has changed for this academic year.

See timescales and deadlines

We hope that your time here at Oxford Brookes University will be happy and productive. However, we recognise that unfortunately sometimes our students can experience serious personal difficulties which can affect their ability to study or undertake assessment.

The University has a procedure in place for students who are experiencing exceptional circumstances that are affecting their ability to study or undertake assessment.

Information and advice

Exceptional Circumstances Procedure

Submitting an application

Support and further information

What are exceptional circumstances?

The University considers an exceptional circumstance to be:

Additionally, the timing of the circumstances must be relevant to the affected assessments and/or period of study.

All elements must be met in order to substantiate an application for exceptional circumstances.

Types of assessment

Assessments at the University take many forms but in terms of exceptional circumstances, they fall broadly into 3 categories:

You can apply for extensions or resits on deadline assessments, or an opportunity to take an event assessment again at a later date. To do this you will either need to make a Type A, Type B, Type C or Type D application. For more information, please see the Exceptional Circumstances Procedure.

Is it an exceptional circumstance?

Not all events which disrupt your ability to progress with your studies will be considered as exceptional circumstances. Everyday life is full of unforeseeable events and incidents which we expect students to manage on their own, in preparation for professional working life. Unexpected illnesses or events do not automatically lead to academic underperformance. Therefore, it is important that you consider whether your circumstance meets all of the criteria to satisfy the University's exceptional circumstances definition before making an application.\ \

Exceptional circumstances - normally considered (with the appropriate evidence)

Exceptional circumstances - not normally considered

More information about specific circumstances

See What are exceptional circumstances for more information about specific circumstances such as:

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