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28 mai 2018

The university grade inflation debate is going global

By Robert Ubell. From Ireland to India, rising grades at universities and colleges continue to grab media headlines. No longer confined to a few countries, the grade inflation debate has gone global. This typically leads to allegations of falling standards and that qualifications are being devalued. More...

28 mai 2018

Look before jumping into the branch campus business

By Robert Ubell. Like airline pilots, college leaders aren’t known for risky behaviour. On the contrary, they’re a pretty cautious bunch. But when it comes to launching satellite campuses abroad, some have been flying blind. More...

28 mai 2018

Why displaced people are being failed by higher education

By Genevieve Barrons. Worldwide fewer than 1% of refugees have access to higher education.
Historically, this statistic hasn’t attracted a huge amount of attention: before 2013 most displaced people came from countries where higher education attainment was already relatively low. That changed with Syria. More...
28 mai 2018

The case for evolving from dual to joint degrees

By Jessica Kling. In the field of international education, institutions are constantly evolving to meet students’ needs. Many institutions and providers offer short-term or semester exchange programmes, but the number of long-term programmes such as dual or joint degree programmes, is on the rise. More...
28 mai 2018

Mandatory electronic marking system draws mixed response

By Ashraf Khaled. Egypt’s higher education authorities this month ordered all universities in the Middle Eastern country to apply electronic marking systems starting from the next academic year with the aim of saving time in the assessment process and ensuring fairness to students. More...
28 mai 2018

Morocco and Qatar in joint higher education initiatives

By Wagdy Sawahel. Morocco and Qatar have unveiled a higher education cooperation plan that includes setting up a joint institution in the North African country’s capital Rabat and a cross-border campus of a Moroccan university in the Arab nation’s capital Doha, along with networking opportunities among universities to boost learning. More...
28 mai 2018

Oxbridge is good value but teachers are less creative

By Brendan O’Malley. The study, How Different is Oxbridge?, published by the Higher Education Policy Institute claims to show how the student experience differs from the experience at other Russell Group universities and all UK universities. More...
28 mai 2018

Lifeline handed to students left in the lurch by UT Tyler

By Binod Ghimire. More than a dozen universities in the United States have extended scholarships to students from Nepal who were left in the lurch after the University of Texas at Tyler (UT Tyler) revoked full scholarships granted for their undergraduate programme. More...
28 mai 2018

States bypass Congress in battle to help hungry students

By Goldie Blumenstyk, The Chronicle of Higher Education. It’s difficult for college students to qualify for federal food-assistance benefits under current law, and the Farm Bill that was voted down by the United States House of Representatives this month would have made it even harder – for them and many others. More...
28 mai 2018

Scrapped tuition fees boost Germany’s popularity

By Michael Gardner. The absence of tuition fees at most universities in Germany appears to be the chief aspect international students consider when making their choice of where to study, ahead of the quality of higher education offered. The key consideration in funding their study period abroad is being allowed to work part-time, a recent study found. More...
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