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Jan./Feb.
2002
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Regional
News
BRAZILProfessors End Strike
A settlement
was reached in late November, with the government agreeing to a 13 percent
increase in wages for faculty and the hiring of 2,000 additional professors.
The
Chronicle of Higher Education
CANADAOntario Schools Denied Tuition Deregulation
Queen's has been the most vocal advocate for deregulation of undergraduate tuition in the province. Detractors of the proposal say that such a move would cause tuition fees to go through the roof, making it difficult, if not impossible, for many students to pay for college. Although Queen's was the only institution to formally issue such a request to the Ontario Ministry of Education, a few other universities, including Laurier and Waterloo, have also shown support for deregulation. In 1997,
tuition caps were lifted on some graduate professional programs such as
business, engineering, medicine and law. As a result, medical school tuition
at the University of Western Ontario,
for example, went from CAN$4,844 to CAN$10,753 a year.
The
Star PERUStudents Take Over University
The accusations
resulted in an official investigation, which has the rector, vice rector,
several faculty deans and heads of the legal and financial administration
facing charges of embezzlement, fraud and contempt of court.
Times Higher Education Supplement UNITED STATESStudent Exchanges On the Rise Despite Sept. 11
At State College, Pennsylvania, Rotary members recently handed out 50 applications for study abroad programs, compared to the usual five or six. According
to the Institute for International Education,
approximately 130,000 U.S. high school and college students go abroad
to study each year. A spokeswoman for AFS said many students want to show
they are not afraid and want to increase their understanding of the world
and the people who live in it.
CNN.com International Student Enrollment Up
The survey showed that more international students were gravitating toward small liberal arts colleges and to schools in the American heartland. Colleges and universities that enrolled more international students in 2001 included: Boston University
(705), Bryn Mawr (72), Case Western Reserve (150), Claremont McKenna (14),
Coe (177), Dickinson (47), Evergreen State, Franciscan University of Steubenville,
Grinnell (150), Hampden-Sydney (7), Harvard, Hillsdale, Lake Forest (110),
LaSalle, Lehigh (42), Macalester (163), Middlebury (158), Missouri Baptist
(17), Northeastern Illinois, Northwestern (249), Oberlin (90), Ohio State
University (471), Old Dominion, Pine Manor (50), Prairie View A&M
(62), Providence (34), Purdue (300), St. Louis University (104), St. Michael's
College (26), Santa Clara University, Southern Methodist University (201),
Swarthmore (21), Truman State, University of California-Santa Cruz, University
of Idaho, University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign, University of North
Carolina-Chapel Hill (115), University of North Dakota (414), University
of Toledo (350), University of Tulsa (135), University of Utah (81), University
of Wisconsin-Madison, Wells (29), Westminster (72), Wittenberg and Worcester
Polytechnic Institute (206).
College Bound
Sylvan Acquires French College
Sylvan, which paid US$8.1 million in cash for the school, now operates five international colleges in Chile, Mexico, Spain, Switzerland and France, boasting a total enrollment of 49,000 full-time students. The newly
acquired institution offers practical-oriented programs focusing on international
trade and quantitative management. In addition, the college provides internships
with multinational corporations and requires that students learn two or
three languages.
The Chronicle of Higher Education
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