Courtesy of Mish.
On June 7, 2014 I wrote Looking to Drastically Reduce College Costs? Study Abroad!
Yesterday, a writer for the Washington Post expressed the same opinion.
Please consider 7 countries where Americans can study at universities, in English, for free (or almost free).
Since 1985, U.S. college costs have surged by about 500 percent, and tuition fees keep rising. In Germany, they've done the opposite.
The country's universities have been tuition-free since the beginning of October, when Lower Saxony became the last state to scrap the fees. Tuition rates were always low in Germany, but now the German government fully funds the education of its citizens — and even of foreigners.
What might interest potential university students in the United States is that Germany offers some programs in English — and it's not the only country. Let's take a look at the surprising — and very cheap — alternatives to pricey American college degrees.
Germany
Americans can earn a German undergraduate or graduate degree without speaking a word of German and without having to pay a single dollar of tuition fees: About 900 undergraduate or graduate degrees are offered exclusively in English, with courses ranging from engineering to social sciences.
Finland
This northern European country charges no tuition fees, and it offers a large number of university programs in English. However, the Finnish government amiably reminds interested foreigners that they "are expected to independently cover all everyday living expenses." In other words: Finland will finance your education, but not your afternoon coffee break.
France
There are at least 76 English-language undergraduate programs in France, but many are offered by private universities and are expensive. Many more graduate-level courses, however, are designed for English-speaking students, and one out of every three French doctoral degrees is awarded to a foreign student. "It is no longer needed to be fluent in French to study in France," according to the government agency Campus France.
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Picture from Tpsdave at Pixabay; it's a school in Russia.