Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Members
Registered members
Current visitors
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Open Chat
Open Talk
Moment medical students find out school will be tuition-free
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Help Support AVForums:
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="santoshlv426" data-source="post: 1169022" data-attributes="member: 1941"><p>Universities such as Pretoria must be doing something right to be listed on the global university rankings. </p><p>Irrespective of what happens during the year, they all have to still write and pass the same exams which is benchmarked with it's global peers. It would be wrong to take away someone's Engineering or MBA earned at a university such as Pretoria simply because it's South African. </p><p>I'm not defending here, but one must as whether a degree costing $250,000 vs R250,000 is actually justified simply given the country where it was earned from. </p><p>Many - if not all South African parents would want their kids educated in a US or UK university, whatever institution that is. One must ask though whether a degree costing 3x in Radns earned from a pedestrian US/UK university is worth all that much more than the same from a top RSA university. If one can afford it, why not I suppose. </p><p>Although I think we're straying from the initial topic of this post.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="santoshlv426, post: 1169022, member: 1941"] Universities such as Pretoria must be doing something right to be listed on the global university rankings. Irrespective of what happens during the year, they all have to still write and pass the same exams which is benchmarked with it's global peers. It would be wrong to take away someone's Engineering or MBA earned at a university such as Pretoria simply because it's South African. I'm not defending here, but one must as whether a degree costing $250,000 vs R250,000 is actually justified simply given the country where it was earned from. Many - if not all South African parents would want their kids educated in a US or UK university, whatever institution that is. One must ask though whether a degree costing 3x in Radns earned from a pedestrian US/UK university is worth all that much more than the same from a top RSA university. If one can afford it, why not I suppose. Although I think we're straying from the initial topic of this post. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Open Chat
Open Talk
Moment medical students find out school will be tuition-free
Top