26 octobre 2014

Public higher education versus private

At the tertiary level, public expenditure per student in both public and private institutions averaged US$9,221 in OECD countries in 2012, the Education at a Glance report says. But the amount varied from about US$2,000 in Chile to more than US$17,000 in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden – the four countries where the share of private spending is small or negligible. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:31 - - Permalien [#]


Loans cost students and governments

The financial support that students receive during their studies cannot be solely analysed in terms of the proportion of students who take out loans. The amount support also depends on the size of the loans, according to the OECD report Education at a Glance 2014. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:30 - - Permalien [#]

National approaches to funding tertiary education

Many countries have similar goals for tertiary education, such as strengthening the knowledge economy, increasing access for students, encouraging high completion rates, and ensuring the financial stability of their higher education systems, according to the OECD’s latest Education at a Glance report. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:29 - - Permalien [#]

Tuition fees differ markedly between nations

By Geoff Maslen. The cost of higher education and the best way to support students in paying for that education are among the most hotly debated public policy topics in education today, according to the latest OECD report Education at a Glance 2014. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:28 - - Permalien [#]

Tertiary education: The gift that keeps on giving

By Ángel Gurría. The data on earnings in Education at a Glance 2014 point to a widening gap between the educational ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’. Across OECD countries, the difference in income from employment between adults without upper secondary education and those with a tertiary degree continues to grow. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:27 - - Permalien [#]


The cost of getting a higher education degree

As part of this special coverage on what it costs the world’s students to obtain a degree, the following articles are based on information drawn from various chapters in the OECD report, Education at a Glance 2014, released last month.
These edited extracts describe the fees and other charges that students – domestic and foreign – face in attending tertiary education institutions in the different member countries and, in some cases, those outside the OECD.
University World News is grateful to the OECD for providing copyright clearance to allow us to publish extracts from the report. Note that there is no charge for downloading the report and readers can locate more of the data online. The Excel spreadsheets used to create the tables and charts are also freely available via the Statlinks system provided throughout the report. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:23 - - Permalien [#]

Expanding enrolments with little state funding

By Ranjit Goswami. There have been two schools of thought in determining whether higher education should qualify as a public or a private good. It is not merely a question of intention, as evidence has long suggested that nations that have treated higher education as a public good have benefitted from increased productivity. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:21 - - Permalien [#]

Fees debate obscures purpose of higher education

By Erin Nordal. This past month in Europe has been characterised by debates on tuition fees, or what some attempt to downplay by calling ‘cost-sharing’. Some have tried to disguise it as a ’necessary evil’ in the light of the financial crisis but it has become more and more clear that tuition fees may not have anything to do with the state of the economy. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:19 - - Permalien [#]

Plans to drop fees could lower quality

By Carlos Olivares. After becoming the first country in Latin America to introduce tuition fees, Chile’s government has pledged to move towards scrapping them. But universities wonder if this will lead to a less effective, lower quality higher education system and who it will benefit most? Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:17 - - Permalien [#]

A grand social experiment

By Claire Callender. The British government radically reformed the funding of undergraduate higher education in England in 2012-13 – to make higher education financially sustainable, to improve the student experience, and to increase social mobility. Read more...

Posté par pcassuto à 13:15 - - Permalien [#]