Cambridge, Oxford, Harvard, Yale, MIT are universities that, in the ordinary student's mind, are in a different reality: with green lawns, wise professors, old libraries and neat campuses. T&P found out how much training costs, what the admission procedure looks like and what are the requirements for top universities in the world for applicants. In the new issue, Oxford University.
https://stackshare.io/PetrDruker
Among Oxford's graduates, 26 Nobel Prize winners and 26 British Prime Ministers, this is the second oldest university in the world, so there is an average of five people entering a competition for admission. According to statistics, 91% of graduates are satisfied with the quality of their education. An application for admission will cost £ 60 if you are trying to enroll in one specialty, and £ 22 for an unlimited number of attempts this year. Interestingly, an applicant cannot send his application to Oxford and Cambridge, which is always competing with him.
Any person can be admitted to the university, regardless of age. The main criteria are his school performance and the quality of knowledge. In addition, during the interviewing process additional qualities of candidates are revealed: general intellectual level, interest and motivation in getting an education. For all the years the university has existed, students from 140 countries managed to visit its walls. Currently, there are two students from the UK for one foreigner.
https://fold.it/portal/user/918601/
The peculiarity of Oxford in its unique system, consisting of 44 colleges and 5 closed Christian communities, differing in the number of students and disciplines studied, the charter and schedule. Each college pays great attention to expanding its own library and improving equipment, improving the quality of accommodation in dormitories, developing infrastructure, sports and social functions.
https://logopond.com/petrdruker/profile/400251
The founding date of the university has not yet been established, the first mention of it dates back to 1096. In 1167, by decree of King Henry II, most English students were forced to leave French universities and return to Oxford. At first, the territory of the university was quite small, but mainly monks studied there. From the 13th century, various colleges began to form, a kind of community united by geographical or religious grounds. The first college for women appeared in 1878, but only in 1920 women were awarded the first degrees.
No comments:
Post a Comment