How the US can stem decline in international students

Global Ranking Monitor
New enrolment of international students to US universities dropped by 2,1%. Higher education institutions are likely to lose US$125 million in revenue during the first year of studies. Other factors, like that many institutions are reliant on foreign students’ tuition fees or that the international students don’t necessarily see great career prospects in the country under the Trump presidency, might mean universities have to discover new tactics to be able to attract international students. Source: University World News 14/11/2017
Read More

Denmark: Institutions move to cut international student numbers

Global Ranking Monitor
Higher institutions took action after the Minister for Higher Education and Science expressed concerns that they do not educate primarily for the Danish workforce. That means a 28% drop in the number of foreign students entering the universities in 2017. A research earlier showed that of all Eastern European students graduating in Denmark, only 20% stays in the country after.         Source: University World News 08/11/2017
Read More

Time for decisive action to improve teacher education

Global Ranking Monitor
Many reports have been done on teacher education and how it would be best to improve teaching quality at every level of education. The problem is that many of these recommendations are not taken up, and that with the change of government the approach towards the issue seems to be changing completely as well. How would it be possible to transform teaching for everyone’s benefit? Source: University World News 10/11/2017
Read More

The changing landscape of private higher education

Global Ranking Monitor
We are witnessing a repositioning of private higher education as the boundaries between it and public higher education are becoming even more blurred than ever in the last two decades. Private institutions are well-established in the US and East Asia (eg. Japan, Singapore, South Korea), but not so popular in Western Europe. We still need to understand these universities better so we can make sure they contribute to our economical growth and innovation in a way public universities have.       Source: University World News 03/11/2017
Read More

What China’s soft power means for European universities

Global Ranking Monitor
China is both a source for international students (universities in Australia and the UK are reliant on the tuition fee paid by them), and also a popular destination for students from other countries. Education has become a means for China to expand its influence and grow into one of the most powerful countries in the world. Now China is turning its attention towards the nations of Central and Eastern Europe.       Source: University World News 03/11/2017
Read More

Conflicted by China’s influence in Australian universities

Global Ranking Monitor
Many Australian universities are dependent from the tuition fees Chinese students pay, and in the last two decades more and more students have arrived to Australia from China to study. So many in fact that they seem to inhabit a ’parallel society’, seldom engaging with the Australian society. This complex situation causes different kinds of conflicts at the universities. Source: University World News 03/11/2017
Read More