A Boston Globe pictorial shows pictures of thousands of students as well as other protestors violently mobbing the streets of London this past December. The British Parliament met to vote on a proposal to significantly raise tuition fees as part of an ongoing austerity program, a measure which passed narrowly. Protestors even attacked the car of Prince Charles and his wife Camilla even though they were inside.
Regardless, college tuition has increased at a significantly more rapidly rate in the United States and some American students are deciding to attend English-speaking colleges ???across the pond.??à It sounds virtually unbelievable?aas English students protest in mobs?a but by U.S. standards, most universities across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are a ???cheap??à alternative.
CNBC reports that universities abroad?aespecially those in nations exactly where English will be the first language?aare capitalizing on the price of higher education within the United States.
The Wall Street Journal reports that the cost for an overseas undergraduate at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland will be about $19,000 for the 2009-2010 academic year. A year at the prestigious University of Oxford would cost an American undergraduate student just over $20,000.
Every college in the top 20 of the U.S. News and Globe Report???s most recent Very best U.S. Colleges ranking entails a minimum of $30,000 per year for tuition and fees. Most are actually closer to $40,000 per year?aor higher.
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