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Sign up with Google Sign up with FacebookQ: If my family was not so rich but I still want to go ad study abroad, where can I go ?
Many Chinese kids want to go out and carry on university studies, but to some of these families finance can be a problem, what are the countries for low budget university studies that you can recommend ?
11 years 15 weeks ago in Teaching & Learning - China
If the Child is gifted in some way they can apply for scholarships
I'm led to believe that the Fees in Australia are not to bad
and part time jobs are plentiful if you need to supplement finances and some
are not bad jobs like pharmacy assistant or in retail and the old McDonalds cashier
do a web search of universities in Australia and ask them some questions
best of luck
MissA:
Fees for local students are not too bad at all (unless you want to do a non-HECS funded postgraduate degree), but are extremely high for international students.
There are lots of agencies in China that help students get scholarships to foreign schools. Do a search on Baidu and I am sure you will find lots of them.
Get admitted to a United States College or University, be talented but poor the first year, really talented, and with a little bit of luck, you may get a scholarship for the first year. For graduate school, especially in certain subjects, the changes also increase. It's not so totally bleak out there. America is still a land of great opportunity for those who seek it.
because tuition is paid by government in germany , study and pass german proficiency test and get in a university there and pay about 70000 rmb a year for housing and food or less , much better than prices in other countries.
have some chinese students i know study economics in germany
Shining_brow:
Czech Republic has free university education for any courses in the Czech langauge... including a 5 year BA and MA (translating/Interpreting).
However - a) you need to have some basic Czech to apply (which can be gotten around by doing a short course for a few months there), and b) who wants Czech??? (sure, I'd love to go there to live, but seriously.....
To add a couple of things to PhilB and MissA's post above...
In Australia:
A) you can legally work as an international student for 20 hours per week (maximum). Our immigration department is VERY strict about this, and you can get deported if you work over that. But, depending on the job you get, that can be more than enough! I had a Kenyan friend doing his PhD, and was working graveyard shifts in an inbound call centre - that was paying about $30/hour... so, he was on around $600/week - for a student, that's awesome!
B) While costs for international students wanting their undergraduate (Bachelor's) degree can be pretty expensive, I've noticed costs for Post-graduate (eg, Master's degree) to be only around 20% more than Australian domestic students (of course, you would need to check which degree program offers what, in regards to fees! That 20% figure may only have been for the ones I was looking at)
Fiji what more could you ask for from the two univesties one being the Uni of Fiji the other The University of the Pacific (also has campuses in other Pacific countries). Go to your lecture and afterwards head down to the beach and study could't ask for anything more. It is cheaper than most unis in the world and most of the staff are either from NZ or Australia