Saturday, 20 August 2011

Repayment of education loan may be extended up to 15 yrs

Students availing education loan could get longer a repayment period of up to 15-years if the Union finance ministry agrees to a suggestion given by Indian Banks Association (IBA). At present, the repayment period varies from seven to 10-years. A committee of IBA headed by T M Bhasin, chairman and managing director of Indian Bank has suggested that this repayment period be extended and it is up to the the finance ministry to accept it.

M Narendra, chairman and managing director of Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) in an informal chat with reporters on the sidelines of a function organized by Mangalore University here on Thursday, where IOB donated Rs 14 lakh for campus beautification project of the university, said banks will lend only to students of recognized educational institutions and universities. Extension in repayment period would address issue of educational loan defaults, he noted.

IOB is the leading bank in Tamil Nadu in terms of lending to education, he said, adding that the bank disbursed Rs 2,000 crore by way of education loans in the last fiscal to around 1.05 lakh students. The move to donate Rs 14 lakh to campus beautification programme was in sync with the bank's theme during its platinum jubilee year celebration, which was touching the hearts and spreading the smile. "We are indirectly aiding education even here," he noted.

The bank, Narendra said, will also partner Mangalore University in its future endeavours by way of instituting scholarships/medals or setting up study centres or chairs. Narendra at the same time urged the university to patronise his bank, which would spur the bank to give more for the region. "We have plans to set up 21 new branches in the recently set up Mangalore region, to complement the existing network of 25 branches," he said.

T C Shivashankara Murthy, VC, who presided over the function said the university which has excelled academically and was improving on the infrastructure front was lagging in terms of overall campus aesthetics. "We have chalked out extensive campus beautification programme over the next one year at a cost of Rs 1.2-crore and around six banks have agreed to donate Rs 80 lakh. The university will meet the rest of the cost from its internal funds," he noted.

Canadian universities see student surge from India

The number of Indian students attending Canadian universities has surged in recent years as the booming population seeks high-quality education and inexpensive costs, the president of the University of Alberta said on Friday.
More than 12,000 post-secondary students from India are expected to attend Canadian universities this year, nearly four times the number that attended Canadian schools in 2008.
As many as 697 students from India studied at the University of Alberta in 2010 – a 311 per cent increase since the 2008 school year.
University of Alberta President Indira Samarasekera has been recruiting students from India for years and says the surge of enrollment is due in part to school shortages back home.
"Indian students are looking for opportunities given that there are a large number of Indian students in the age range of 18 to 25," Samarasekera told CTV Canada AM on Friday.
"They are looking for places with both reputation and quality, but value for money. Canada is an extremely sweet spot when you combine all of those."
Samarasekera said that less than 10 per cent of Indian students have a chance to study at home. She said that students have been flooding U.S. universities for years, but have recently turned to Canadian institutions for their high quality and comparably lower cost.
While not all of the students will stay in Canada after graduation, Samarasekera said she envisions the development of a "brain chain," as students who return home or move elsewhere maintain links to the Canadian economy.
"I see brain circulation. Some will stay here, some will eventually go back to India. But given the nature of our economies globally and extreme interconnectedness, many Indian students will work for multi-national companies either owned by Canadians or with links to Canada," Samarasekera said.
Vishal Vaidya, an MBA student and president of the Indian Students Association, says he came to Canada after meeting recruiters in India.
"Most of the Canadian schools are compatible with other schools in North America and England," he told CTV Canada AM. "Another important factor was the diversity of students we have in Canada. That gives Indian students the opportunity to come out and mix with students from a variety of cultures."
Vaidya added that the cold Canadian winters were not as much as a turn-off as some might expect.
"I think it is a misconception that we don't enjoy the winters. Being an Indian it is quite a novel thing and I'm sure a lot of students enjoy the new weather they are exposed to."

Friday, 19 August 2011

The Government of Canada Helps Youth Prepare for the Job Market

Local youth who face barriers to employment will get job preparation training and work experience through the Government of Canada's support for an employment program. Mr. David Tilson, Member of Parliament for Dufferin–Caledon and Mr. Patrick Brown, Member of Parliament for Barrie, made the announcement today on behalf of the Honourable Diane Finley, Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development.
"For many young Canadians, making the transition to the job market is a challenge, especially in today's environment," said Mr. Tilson. "That's why our government is creating opportunities for youth to succeed through support for initiatives like the Step Up Program."

"We want Canadians to be ready and trained for the jobs that will be in demand," said Mr. Brown. "Through programs like Skills Link, the federal government is helping Canadian youth shape a stronger economy."
With assistance from the federal Skills Link program, Georgian College of Applied Arts and Technology will help 72 youth develop the skills and experience needed to find a job or the confidence to return to school.
The participants will attend group workshops on employability skills that focus on topics such as effective communication, résumé writing and job search strategies. The participants will then benefit from work placements in sectors such as retail, child care or customer service, allowing them to apply their new skills and gain hands-on experience.

Skills Link helps youth facing barriers to employment, such as single parents, Aboriginal youth, youth with disabilities, recent immigrants, youth living in rural and remote areas, and youth who have dropped out of high school.

Georgian College of Applied Arts and Technology will receive over $556,000 in federal Skills Link funding to support its Step Up Program.
This news release is available in alternative formats upon request.

BACKGROUNDER

As part of the Government of Canada's Youth Employment Strategy, the Skills Link program is one of three programs that help young Canadians, particularly those facing barriers to employment, obtain career information, develop skills, gain work experience, find good jobs and stay employed. The other two programs are Summer Work Experience and Career Focus.
Skills Link helps youth between 15 and 30 years of age who are not receiving Employment Insurance benefits develop basic and advanced employment skills. It assists participants through a coordinated, client-centred approach that offers longer-term supports and services tailored to their specific needs to help them find and keep a job.

Youth employment programs are also part of the Government of Canada's strategy to create the best educated, most skilled and most flexible workforce in the world. The Government underscored its commitment to this strategy in Canada's Economic Action Plan. A key component of the Plan is to create more and better opportunities for Canadian workers through skills development. To learn more about Canada's Economic Action Plan, visit www.actionplan.gc.ca

The Skills Link program is delivered by Service Canada, which provides one-stop personalized services for Government of Canada programs, services and benefits. For more information about this program, visit servicecanada.gc.ca, call 1 800 O-Canada or drop by your local Service Canada Centre.

China-ASEAN education collaboration on fast track

Having studied at Guizhou University for three years, Jarunee Pourprasert from Thailand is not only fluent in Chinese, but can even use local Chinese dialects from time to time.
Preferring to be called "Pan Meimei," the tourism management major describes China as "a passionate, friendly and rapidly-developing country with a rich culture."
"I am glad to be here to see what the real China is like, as I used to watch Chinese sitcoms to learn Chinese at Siam University," she said.
Having received a full scholarship from the Chinese government, Pourpraser is one of many students from member countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) who have benefited from closer educational cooperation between China and the ASEAN.
Official statistics released by China's Ministry of Education during the fourth China-ASEAN Education Cooperation Week, an educational conference currently taking place in southwest China's Guizhou Province, showed that from 2008 to 2010, the number of ASEAN students studying in China surged from 34,000 to 49,000, registering an average annual increase of 7,420 students.
The number of Chinese studying in ASEAN member countries ballooned from 68,000 to 82,000 over the same period of time, increasing by 6,960 students each year.
Liu Baoli, deputy director of the Department of International Cooperation and Exchanges of the Ministry of Education, said that the exchange program has received "high recognition" from educational officials from both China and ASEAN countries at the conference.
"More and more youngsters in China and the ASEAN are learning about each others' languages, culture and history," said Liu.
Liu Jinghui, secretary-general of the China Scholarship Council regards the exchanges as being "particularly significant at the moment," as China and ASEAN member countries collectively make up one of the world's most dynamic economies. These regions will need to find new engines for future development after achieving rapid economic expansion over the last 20 years, according to Liu Jinghui.
"Competition in the age of globalization can be reduced to a competition of talent. Increased international student exchanges represent a general trend," Liu Jinghui said.
Misran Bin Karmain, deputy secretary-general of ASEAN, said that he hopes Asia's new generation of students can improve their abilities and gain invaluable experience through overseas studies, as this will help to to become more competitive in a rapidly changing global market.
To inspire youngsters students in China and ASEAN member countries to study abroad, the Chinese government promised to provide scholarships to 10,000 ASEAN students by 2010. It reached cooperative education agreements with Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia and Philippines and signed mutual diploma recognition contracts with Malaysia and Thailand to that end.
A total of 31 ASEAN universities have inked 135 cooperation agreements with 47 Chinese universities so far, according to Liu Baoli.
At Chinese institutes of higher education, students can major in all languages spoken in ASEAN countries. For students from ASEAN member countries, China has trained nearly 5,000 Mandarin Chinese lecturers and volunteers to provide the students with language instruction.
"These advancements have provided solid policy and legal support for China and ASEAN members to enhance their collaboration in higher education," said Liu Baoli.
China's Ministry of Education has planned to turn China into Asia's most popular destination for overseas students. By 2020, the number of foreign students studying in Chinese mainland universities, as well as primary and middle schools, is predicted to reach half a million. In the future, Liu said that China will continue to facilitate mutual diploma recognition programs with ASEAN member countries and establish an overseas study foundation to encourage more students to study abroad.

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

There’s never been a better time to head abroad for your studies

Students are increasingly exploring their options for studying overseas. With some degrees in Scandinavia still free to EU students and with scholarships available elsewhere to tempt the academically gifted, now is a good time to begin looking at the alternatives.
The Open Doors report by the US Institute for International Education found that a record 8,861 UK students, around 5,000 indian students and many more studied in US universities in 2009/10, marking a 2 per cent increase from the previous year. A little under half of all students heading to the US are studying at undergraduate level, while a third take postgraduate degrees.

US universities teach a general first year that allows for a wide breadth of study. Students taking liberal arts degrees only have to choose their major subject in the third year. This has advantages over the UK system, where subject specialism does not allow for easy changes of direction.
The University of Oregon is run by the state, which means local students pay lower fees. One can find that he/she can be qualified for an out of state grant to help offset annual tuition fees of around $20,000 (£12,200). Although high, many American institutions offer generous scholarships. Well endowed by their alumni networks and with a tradition of gifting money, many private universities seek to attract the most academically gifted students with full or half-cost scholarships, particularly at private universities and the elite Ivy League institutions, such as Harvard, Wharton, Yale and Stanford. You’ll need to be quick, because they tend to have early deadlines. There may also be scholarships attached to specific subjects

Students should also apply early for their visa through the US embassy.  There is no equivalent to Ucas in the US, so students must apply directly to universities.

A student Ruth Kinsey, who graduated in May with a magna cum laude honours degree in German and history from Vanderbilt University Nashville, was in the sixth form of Wycombe Abbey school when the dean of Vanderbilt’s school of arts and sciences came to give a talk.
After a holiday visit to several US universities the summer before she applied, Kinsey narrowed her shortlist to two, Johns Hopkins University and Vanderbilt, which won her over by awarding her four scholarships to pay all her tuition, accommodation and living expenses. In the course of a four-year degree, Kinsey received just over $200,000 (£122,300) in scholarships. “It is very unlikely Ruth would have been offered a place to study history at an English university as she had studied all science A-levels at school. With the American system, she didn’t have to specialise immediately. Vanderbilt gave her the chance to change academic direction, says her mother, Sue Kinsey. “My husband and I pay her air fares and medical insurance but, as we are both teachers, without a full scholarship there’s no way we could have afforded to subsidise her,” she says.
Like all students wanting to study in the US, Kinsey had to take a scholastic aptitude test (SAT), a standard for university admission based on mathematics, critical reading and writing. She scored over 800. “I started to major in history in my third year and in the final year I submitted a 60-page research paper. My topic was the history of the Jesuit mission to the Lakota Sioux in South Dakota,” says Kinsey.
Her time at Nashville will be memorable for another reason. While on the course, Kinsey met her future husband, Alex. They got married on 30 July at a church in Nashville. “Alex and I are now living in Madison Wisconsin and I’ve just started a new job at the Gordon Flesch Company as an executive assistant,” she says.
The Fulbright Commission offers scholarships to encourage talented international students to study in some of the best US universities. According to the Fulbright Commission, the top five US universities receiving students are Harvard University, New York University, Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Southern California. A Fulbright award can cover the full tuition costs or even half the costs of a degree at an Ivy League university (see www.fulbright.co.uk/study-in-the-usa).
Studying environmental stewardship as part of the Fulbright Summer Institute hosted by Northern Arizona University at Flagstaff, Anna Dominey from London was part of a small group of students from the UK to join a six-week international study programme that would give students a taste of the US campus experience.
Dominey, who went to Lady Margaret School in Parson’s Green, holds offers from Oxford University and St Andrews to read theology. “I heard about Fulbright through the Social Mobility Foundation, a charity that supports students from lower-income backgrounds. I was eligible through receiving an education maintenance allowance and having a strong academic track record. I wanted to apply, because I have always wanted to explore somewhere far from home,” she says.
Dominey would consider applying to a US university, possibly to do a postgraduate degree. “From what I have seen, universities in the US have as much, if not more, to offer as UK institutions. There is so much to explore and experience, and the differences in culture add new dimensions to one’s area of study,” she says.
Thanks to the Bologna Process, which created a European higher education area, it is now easier for UK students to study as undergraduates in Europe, and three-year degrees are widely adopted as standard. Those taught in English, with high academic standards and competitive fees, are attracting keen interest.
Joint degrees including a language encourage students to spend a year of their degree being taught at a European institution. The University of Bristol, for example, offers several law degrees, including law with French or German, and a four-year Bachelors degree in law, one year of which is spent at a European university. Law students at the University of Glasgow spend a year out at a university in France, Germany, Italy, Portugal or Spain.
However, European university fees are roughly equivalent to, and in some cases higher than, tuition fees in the UK. With the pound at such a weak position against the euro, UK students are likely to suffer from higher fees and a higher cost of living in some parts of the Continent than they otherwise might. But other European countries have clung on to their tradition of offering free university education. In Sweden, Finland and a small number of German federal states, undergraduate degrees are free. UK students enjoy the same rights as other EU citizens to a free higher education in these countries and most of the degrees are taught in English. Finland’s University of Tampere and the Lund and Linköping universities in Sweden have an international reputation for health and social sciences, while the University of Bayreuth and the University of Kassel in Germany specialise in ecology and renewable energy. It is best to check with German institutions to see what fees are payable.
The downside of studying in Finland is that the winters are severe and the cost of monthly living expenses is estimated by the Scholarships for Development website at €700 (£610) a month. Outside the university campus, English is not widely understood and the language can be a hard one to learn.
You are unlikely to have this problem in Sweden, where fluency in English is almost universal. Over the past decade, the numbers of foreign students studying in Sweden has more than tripled, totalling 36,000 in 2008/09. Tuition fees have been introduced for all non-EU students, but there are no plans yet to extend charging.
The University of Lund is Sweden’s largest and best-known institution. Around 50 programmes are taught in English, ranging from international human rights law to sustainable urban design. Excellence is required in all areas of activity as Lund ranks as one of Europe’s leading institutions of higher education. There are about 35,000 undergraduates at Lund and the large student population contributes to an active cultural life, with a wide range of activities and entertainment available.
European universities offer generous contact time and, in some cases, career opportunities that would not be available in the UK. “At Grenoble, there are more taught hours. We attend class on Saturdays and the lessons are in three-hour blocks, not the 40-minute slots you find in the UK,” says Mark Thomas, associate dean of Grenoble Ecole de Management.
Academics, however, point to the UK’s reputation and long track record in delivering high-quality degrees. They say that it is not the number of taught hours that count but the quality of teaching and academic research.
The number of UK undergraduates studying in Europe is rising. There is no centralised data, but leading European universities are reporting average numbers of UK students at around 5 per cent. “We have 30 to 40 UK students each year and 75 different nationalities,” says Patrice Houdayer, vice-president of EM Lyon university.
The European Commission’s Erasmus programme provides funding to UK students to spend time at European universities as part of their degree studies. Developing a more international outlook is imperative for students in the 21st century and there is little doubt that EU-funded projects such as Erasmus, under which students spend part of their degree at a European institution, have encouraged better international understanding. “Eight per cent more UK students were heading to Europe in 2009/10 and a further increase is expected this year,” says David Hibler, the Erasmus programme manager at the British Council.

Let more foreign students in - AUSTRAILIA

QUEENSLAND Premier Anna Bligh is calling for the federal government to urgently open the doors to more international students, saying the industry that trains them is in crisis.
Ms Bligh also warned there will not be enough Australian graduates to cope with the mining boom.
The premier will for an "emergency intervention" to the federal government's policy on overseas students at the Council of Australian Governments meeting in Canberra on Friday.
"We have an international education sector in crisis at the worst possible time for Australia's economy," Ms Bligh said in a statement.
The state's $2.8 billion international education market has been suffering since 2009 when visa requirements for overseas students were toughened and the list of skilled jobs was changed, she said.
Reports of assaults on Indian students, the strong Australian dollar and renewed competition from the US and Canadian markets have also taken their toll.

"Following seven years of massive growth ... student enrolments began to fall sharply in 2009," she said, adding that international student enrolments are down 10 per cent this year compared to last year.
This meant less demand for vocational training and English-language courses, and fewer opportunities for the 17,000 Queenslanders employed in the sector, she said.
Ms Bligh will also call for more working visas to be offered to foreign students who graduate to cope with the mining boom, which she predicts will generate 38,000 jobs.
The in-demand disciplines will include engineering, environmental science, metallurgy, law, hospitality, accounting and management, she said.
"The growth in the sector in the short term is just too significant to be met by Australian citizens alone."

Monday, 15 August 2011

Briefly - About Overseas Education Consultants


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Overseas education Consultants council students who are potty most which instruction theyshould opt for and how are the forthcoming prospects of that portion course?  Since someIndian students today control external for effort higher education,  a super sort of foreigneducation consultants are acquirable in different metros of Indian. metropolis has a super sort of them; Overseas Education Consultants metropolis offer proficient counselling to students and support them opt to attain the correct choices most their courses and goals.  Overseas education consultants behave as a negotiator between students and university
Every year, a super sort of Amerindic students attain a artefact to countries same US, UK,Australia etc for higher education and making a global career.  It is rattling pivotal to intend in contact in contact with these