England: non-EU tuition revenue likely to fall 10%
In the 2020-21 academic year, England's higher education providers anticipate non-EU tuition fee income to fall 10.4%, according to the Office for Students.
In the 2020-21 academic year, England's higher education providers anticipate non-EU tuition fee income to fall 10.4%, according to the Office for Students.
International students are happy they commenced studies in the UK this year, while OfS has noted the "impressive speed" England's providers shifted to online teaching, but flagged concerns about anti-Asian harassment in particular.
UKCISA Fest heard directly from international students on how they feel – "invited to the Prom, but not invited to dance at the Prom" – and covered practical ways that international students can be supported in the country.
A new institution in the UK has been given degree awarding powers and will offer an innovative syllabus that cuts across a number of disciplines.
UK sector bodies have proposed a national loan scheme for students from selected countries among a range of measures to maximise the UK's competitiveness as it kickstarts the recovery of international student recruitment.
The UK's Cambridge University has announced that all lectures will be held online for the next academic year due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.
UK higher education providers should make no promises to students to expect on-campus experience at the beginning of the next academic year, and they must be "as clear as they can be" so that students know what to expect.
10% of UK independent higher education providers have identified opportunities post-Brexit, while many predict a EU student drop, a survey has found.