By Mansoor Iqbal, Education Writer The US Department of Education has made a new online tool available with which students can identify the most expensive and the cheapest colleges in the country. The College Affordability and Transparency Centre allows users to generate reports showing the institutions which charge the highest and lowest tuition fees, and
Indian students make a beeline for Canadian universities
By Kanika Tandon, Education Writer Indian students looking to study abroad are finding Canada an increasingly desirable destination. “Indian students have rediscovered Canada in the last few years,” says Simon Cridland, Head of the Advocacy Programme at the High Commission of Canada in India. The High Commission has witnessed a considerable increase in student visas
Will access agreements make higher education fairer?
By Kanika Tandon, Education Writer English educational institutions will be required to invest a part of the increased tuition fees they receive from next year in helping those from less privileged backgrounds to attend university. This applies to 139 institutions—123 higher education institutions and 16 further education colleges—which have had their access agreements approved by
Large number of English and Welsh Universities given go-ahead to charge domestic and EU students fees of £9,000
By Mansoor Iqbal, Education Writer It has been confirmed that a number of universities in England will be allowed to raise their tuition fees for domestic undergraduates to the maximum permitted amount of £9,000. 47 out of 123 universities will be charging the maximum fee across the board, with just over 80 charging it for
University Internationalization: A Myth in American Higher Education
Mariana Ashley is a freelance writer who particularly enjoys writing about online colleges. She loves receiving reader feedback, which can be directed to mariana.ashley031 @gmail.com. As the world weathers the regressing economic storm, we here in the United States are finally beginning to understand what it means to feel that our status as the unquestionable
Too many graduates, or too few?
by Mansoor Iqbal, Education Writer Competition for jobs may be intense, but the vital role played by graduates in economic growth and recovery means that some voices believe the world needs more, not fewer. It has recently been reported that no less than 83 applicants apply for every graduate level role in the UK. The
The UK’s white paper: toward a user-pays system
By Danny Byrne, Editor of Topuniversities.com On 28th June the UK government published a White Paper, outlining proposals for a new university quality assurance system. In the wake of the raising of the fee cap to £9,000 from 2012 onwards, universities will be forced to publish details of their employment rates for different courses, along
A look at the EUA’s Global University Rankings Report
by Martin Ince, convener of the QS Academic Advisory Board Last month the European University Association, the representative body for higher education in 47 European nations, produced its report on Global University Rankings. The media reports suggest that it is critical of rankings while accepting that they are not going to go away. But what