Industry News

Combating the Commodification of Higher Education

American higher education has many of the same strengths and weaknesses as the United Statesโ€™ entrepreneurial, market-driven system of health care. Institutions of higher learning, like health care providers, vie aggressively for resources, prestige and customers (whether patients or students) within highly competitive marketplaces. Extreme stratification, in reputation and resources, characterizes both the health care and higher education sectors. Institutional competition, in turn, strongly incentivizes colleges and universities to take steps to stand out in highly visible ways that enhance their standing and status. Itโ€™s no surprise that campuses compete with one another in terms of facilities, amenities, breadth of…

What new gov’t in Australia means for int’l education

Last week,ย Universities Australia, Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia andย Independent Higher Education Australia welcomed Jason Clare on his appointment as minister for education. Along withย addressing the skills shortages forย degree-educated workers,ย conducting Australiaโ€™s research and helping toย tackle the challenge of climate and energy transition, universities canย find ways to navigate through a challenging geopolitical landscape and the sensitivities in our region,ย chief executive Catriona Jackson reminded. ITECA added thatย new minister for Skills and Trainingย Brendan Oโ€™Connor can โ€œlook to the nationโ€™s independent skills training sector with confidence as it leads on several key measures of employer and student satisfactionโ€. โ€œWe look forward to working with Ministers…

EduNova launches new agent training program for Nova Scotia

EduNova, a co-operative association of education providers in the Canadian province, says it has launched its training program to ensure that agents are โ€œequipped to provide high-quality seamless support to prospective international studentsโ€. The Canadian Bureau for International Education will deliver the training online and the course will cover the Canadian education system, the post-secondary options available in Nova Scotia, and the immigration pathways available to overseas students.ย  The free training is specifically targeted at agents working with Nova Scotiaโ€™s post-secondary institutions, with the aim of decreasing study permit rejection rates and increasing the number of international students studying in…

US: English language enrolments remained well below pre-pandemic levels in 2021 ย  – ICEF Monitor

Short on time? Here are the highlights: The Intensive English Programme (IEP) sector in the US is looking ahead to recovery after another challenging year in 2021 Total student weeks declined by 9.1% year-over-year Fewer enrolments and student weeks from Asia are prompting US IEPs to intensify their recruitment in Latin America The latest annual survey data from the Institute of International Education (IIE) indicates that there were 5.3% more international students in US Intensive English Programmes (IEPs) in 2021 compared with 2020.ย  However, student weeks fell by a further 9.1% after declining by 51% in 2020. The data was…

UniApp raises โ‚ฌ1m in seed fund round

CEO and founder, Fahed Jaarah, told The PIE News that the main aim of the seed fund round was to โ€œscale fastโ€ due to daily requests by sub-agents to join the network and access partner schools. โ€œWith this funding we continue to build our technology and also we are expanding in important regions such as Africa, Gulf state,ย  Jordan, India and Pakistan,โ€ he said. Jaarah added that the number of requests from universities and student sign-ups had reached unexpected numbers โ€“ greater than their capacity. Startbase reported that the funding has come from an anonymous family office inย North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany,…

Canadian parliamentary committee recommends regulation of education agents

In May 2022, the Canadian Parliamentโ€™s Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration tabled its report, โ€˜Differential Treatment in Recruitment and Acceptance Rates of Foreign Students in Quebec and in the Rest of Canada.โ€˜ The Committeeโ€™s aim was to study the recruitment and acceptance rates of foreign students in Quebec and in the rest of Canada, including francophone students from African countries. It wanted to understand the realities of increasing processing times and higher refusal rates and their impact on students and institutions. During the course of its inquiry the Committee received 22 written submissions and heard from 31 witnesses in…

Canada wants to change Express Entry: A look at the pros and cons

Published on June 2nd, 2022 at 09:00am EDT The Canadian government is set to make the biggest reform to Express Entry since it introduced the application management system in January 2015. Bill C-19 is currently being evaluated by Canadaโ€™s Parliament and based on precedent, should become law sometime in June before Parliament recesses for the summer. It contains a provision that would allow Canadaโ€™s Immigration Minister to create Express Entry groups and then issue Invitations to Apply (ITAs) to these groups. As explained by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), the minister would be able to form groups based on…

Longer work visa could tempt more foreign students to UK, survey finds

International students would be more likely to consider studying in the UK if they were allowed to stay and work for three years instead of two, a survey suggests.Foreign students have been able to stay on and work in the UK for two years after completing their course since July last year, when the government reinstated the two-year post-study work visa after years of pressure from universities.Vivienne Stern, the director of Universities UK International, said vice-chancellors wanted the government to review whether the two-year visa forms were โ€œa barrier to employing international graduatesโ€, and ensure the UK had a โ€œcompetitive…

Australia international graduates vulnerable to exploitation

Laws preventing Australian universities from giving advice on post-study work visas mean that international students looking to stay and work in the country often rely on information from migration agents, who, in some cases, can act unethically, according to a new paper published in interdisciplinary journal Evaluation Review. The study, which drew on interviews with 50 university staff, migration agents and international graduates, found that many universities in Australia avoid giving advice related to temporary graduate visa applications due to legal restrictions. In Australia, only registered migration agents are legally allowed to provide migration advice. The authors of the study…