
- Date
- 28 October 2013 - 09:57
How a technical work and study exchange can change your life
Professor Igor Aleksander writes about how a stint in Milan changed the course of his career.
- Tags
- Education
Voices
Professor Igor Aleksander writes about how a stint in Milan changed the course of his career.
The Study USA programme gives scholarships to Northern Irish students to study business at US universities for a year. Páraic Rafferty writes about spending a year at Bellarmine University.
As Pakistani universities face many of the same issues as those of their UK counterparts, institutional partnerships between the UK and Pakistan will help both countries achieve their goals.
Dylan Gates writes about how English teachers can use ordinary household items in the classroom to make learning fun.
Claire Duly explains what it’s like to transform former rebels into a modern standing army.
Jeremy Chan, regional head of research and consultancy, explains what the Chinese digital education landscape looks like, and the opportunities and risks for foreign investors.
The British Council’s Daud Rasool explains how Afghanistan’s traditional creative industries are being rebuilt after years of war.
Nanotechnology is said to improve several aspects of our lives, e.g., the shelf-life of food, but its minute scale challenges the imagination and raises public concerns.
One very important element to being understood in English is stressing the right words in a sentence.
When the UN set eight Millennium Development Goals for the world to reach by 2015, one was universal primary education. Jo Beall argues that the UN must include higher education also.