Law teaching variously involves lectures, tutorials and seminar groups.
In-person attendance at tutorials and seminar groups is compulsory and your attendance is recorded.
Should you be unable to attend any particular tutorial / seminar class, you should provide an explanation in writing to the teacher, preferably in advance.
If your absence is on medical grounds, you must submit a medical certificate.
If you are absent without explanation from tutorial or seminar in a particular course on two or more occasions, you may receive a letter from the Faculty requesting an explanation and warning you of the consequences of continuing non-attendance.
In particular, failure to attend 70% of classes for any compulsory tutorial or seminar may be regarded as failure to follow instruction in the relevant course(s), and may result in you not being allowed to undertake the final examination or submit assessment(s) in the relevant course(s), you not being permitted re-assessment without repeating the relevant course(s), or, in appropriate cases, in the Faculty late-dropping your enrolment in the relevant course.
As a general rule, work-related reasons are not sufficient to justify non-attendance at classes.