Developing world leads in student population growth

Student numbers are increasing more quickly in the developing world than in industrialised countries, but much of the growth is in vocational courses rather than university degrees, new research has demonstrated. A report by The Research Base (www.Theresearchbase.com), a UK consultancy specialising in education and skills, shows enrolments on academic courses rising fastest in Africa,

Looking west: Universities on America’s Pacific coast

Aside from the UK’s University of Cambridge (number one in 2010 and 2011), only two universities have topped the QS World University Rankings. Harvard University, which held on to the top spot between 2004 and 2009 (it is number three this year), and this year’s first time table-topper, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The

The World of MOOCs According to Moody’s

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There is only one problem with the world’s top universities; not everyone can go. They are too far away, the fees are too massive, or you have other things to do with your life. Now all that is about to change, according to the supporters of MOOCs. This is an acronym you had better learn.

International Student Numbers On The Rise, says OECD

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More than 4 million students are studying abroad for the first time, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The OECD’s estimate of the number of international students only reached 3 million in 2005. But the new edition of its Education at a Glance compendium of statistics puts the total at 4.1