UK universities, the Home Office and the British Council are today launching a new film following Indian students on their journey to study in Britain in an attempt to dispel “myths” about the process.
In 2011-12 there was a 24 per cent drop in the number of Indian studentsat UK universities, although this was offset by a large rise in the number from China.
1 comments:
The comment below talks about an un addressed concern,
the comment appeared in Times Higher education
One point I did not see raised here is the increasing difficulty to administer EU visas when working with postgraduate students (including from India) working as part of EU research grants. This is the case I am confronted with in the past couple of years: we can now only obtain a Shengen-like visa entry for a (non-EU) PhD student (in my case from India) for either one entry within a month or a multi-entry visa for 3 months maximum at a time.. PhDs and typical EU projects last 3 to 4 years (sometime more). So we are facing the trouble of demanding a new visa for re-entry at least every 3 months (we often have meetings with consortium members outside the UK and in Brussels). I have noticed that more recently it is a matter of chance to get the 3 months multi-entry visa: no reasons are given by the visa granting organisations although our request is familiar to them. And of course, each time there are costs: in time wasted (quite literally) and in the fees required. This is becoming such a problem that it will no doubt influence future decisions on hiring "abroad" versus Home/EU candidates. Is this what "we" want to happen?
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