Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 23 May, 11:29, "R.C. Payne" wrote:
Over the long term, the universities are the economy - one of the reasons the US has done so well over the last century is the amount poured into practical academic research. The fact that Harvard and Stanford attract bright people from all over the world has done wonders for the US economy. The fact that most European universities don't is one of the reasons Europe's a mess. Sitting here at my desk in a UK university, looking at the graduate students, I'd say that we have about 10% UK nationals, about 50% other EU nationals, about 15% Commonwealth and most of the remainder are far eastern (Korea and China seem to dominate), though a few interesting others. I'd say we're doing a pretty good job of attracting people from around the globe. Generally UK universities are considered separately from mainland European universities in this context (because ours are unequivocally the best outside the US, largely because we have a national merit- based admissions system rather than a "anyone who passes their A- levels can go to their local Comprehensive University" system. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John B wrote:
On 23 May, 11:29, "R.C. Payne" wrote: Over the long term, the universities are the economy - one of the reasons the US has done so well over the last century is the amount poured into practical academic research. The fact that Harvard and Stanford attract bright people from all over the world has done wonders for the US economy. The fact that most European universities don't is one of the reasons Europe's a mess. Sitting here at my desk in a UK university, looking at the graduate students, I'd say that we have about 10% UK nationals, about 50% other EU nationals, about 15% Commonwealth and most of the remainder are far eastern (Korea and China seem to dominate), though a few interesting others. I'd say we're doing a pretty good job of attracting people from around the globe. Generally UK universities are considered separately from mainland European universities in this context (because ours are unequivocally the best outside the US, largely because we have a national merit- based admissions system rather than a "anyone who passes their A- levels can go to their local Comprehensive University" system. While I can see that applying at undergraduate level (where UK students definitely dominate), I'm not sure that's as relevent at a graduate level. Most of the graduate students here did their undergrad in their home country and have only come here for the next bit. Robin PS perhaps I was a little pessimistic on my previous numbers, perhaps it's more like 20% UK / 40% EU |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
TfL establishes a £2bn Commercial Paper Programme for short-term borrowing | London Transport | |||
'TfL's 'Scrooge-like' £1 ticket for short-cut criticised' | London Transport | |||
TfL �5Bn short for Crossrail | London Transport | |||
TfL £5Bn short for Crossrail | London Transport |