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Volume 14, Issue 1
World Education Services
Signs New Partnership With Embark
COVER
PAGE PRACTICAL
INFORMATION
REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE
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Regional
News
RUSSIA
Under the existing system, students who obtain high scores on their entrance exams have their college education paid for by the government; those who fail can enter universities as long as they pay their own fees. The loans will be targeted toward the growing number of self-financing students who get no support from the state. Long-term loans at low interest rates will prevent students from going into debt, said the acting minister of education who supports the proposal. The decision
to introduce student loans marks a significant departure from the concept
of free education that was so central in the former Soviet Union.
BBC News
The Chechen State University, the Chechen Pedagogical Institute and the Grozny Oil Institute all welcomed students back last fall. During the previous summer the schools attempted with varying degrees of success to conduct impromptu tutorials and distance-learning courses to provide students with a skeleton program of classes. It
is not yet clear exactly how many students re-enrolled at these schools,
but professors seemed confident that the number would return to normal
once people realize that it's safe to come back. Last year the Russian
education minister attempted to lure Chechen students to universities
in Moscow with the promise of free places. Although 350 places were made
available, only 14 accepted the offer.
Times Higher Education Supplement
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