Anonymous wrote:I agree. 2025-26 admissions cycle in the UK will be one of the most competitive ever. Internationals and UK students that would have gone to US will look at UK instead. More americans than even applying to UK unis. It will be interesting….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because the Scottish system is 4 years instead of 3 in England and it allows for more flexibility in changing majors vs zero flexibility in the English unis. It is more aligned with the US system. Not to the extent of being able to take gen ed classes, but you are allowed to explore outside your major the first 2 years and as long as your grades are good on those 2 other subjects you are typically allowed to change your major to one of the other two majors.
Put another way, the US educational system was largely modeled on the Scottish system.
Anonymous wrote:It is because the Scottish system is 4 years instead of 3 in England and it allows for more flexibility in changing majors vs zero flexibility in the English unis. It is more aligned with the US system. Not to the extent of being able to take gen ed classes, but you are allowed to explore outside your major the first 2 years and as long as your grades are good on those 2 other subjects you are typically allowed to change your major to one of the other two majors.
Anonymous wrote:This are the unis with the most number of Americans in their Undergraduate programs. Data is of 2022/23:
1. University of St Andrews – ≈ 1,810
2. University of Edinburgh – ≈ 960
3. University of Oxford – ≈ 720
4. University of Glasgow – ≈ 560
5. University College London (UCL) – ≈ 520
6. University of Westminster – ≈ 400
7. University of Cambridge – ≈ 385
8. King’s College London – ≈ 250
9. University of the Arts London (UAL) – ≈ 250
10. London School of Economics (LSE) – ≈ 245
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This number cant be right or maybe missing a digit….Just St Andrews enrolls about 400 americans per year per the other thread. If enrollment rate there is more like 10% that is 4000 applications to St Andrews alone..
I was speaking to a current student at St. Andrew’s and according to her it is 20 percent Americans now.
Anonymous wrote:This number cant be right or maybe missing a digit….Just St Andrews enrolls about 400 americans per year per the other thread. If enrollment rate there is more like 10% that is 4000 applications to St Andrews alone..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
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Bingo….take a uni like Exeter. Russel group. Decent on some subjects being top 10 in their League tables….for a kid who is independent and the best US school you got in is a t75-t120 OOS or Private, I would go to Exeter in a minute. Amazing campus, small town, just 2 hrs from London and you will spend ~66k Pounds in Tuition for your education…ALL of it. There is nothing this cheap in the US for the same quality unless it is an In-state option…
Exeter is excellent as is Durham, LSE, UCL, Kings London, York, Bristol, Edinburgh, the key universities where ox-bridge rejects tend to land.
But it will cost you more than $66k all in. International fees have gone up again this year so instead of 22k per year its looking more like 28-35k pounds per year tuition, depending on course, plus living costs (accommodation / food / books / expenses). In some of these cities accommodation is scarce because the university has expanded way beyond it's original capacity and the housing has not caught up with it. York was for a long time only housing 3000 undergrads. This number is now closer to 30k undergrads and while some new building / housing has been developed, not enough of it across the board which pushes up prices. Same deal in Bristol and London.
My kid was accepted to Exeter. He was not an Oxbridge reject as he didnt even apply. He applied to 5 of the schools you mentioned. Anyhow, the Tuition for internationals for Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences (including Law) and every Business course is £24,700. For double honors it is like 25.5.
We would pay $33k in today’s dollars. That is $99k in Tuition to graduate vs any of the t100 OOS publics and privates with barely any merit he got in at double that amount just for tuition for 4 years.
it is still much cheaper than the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never even heard of U of Westminster….what is this about?
It is the equivalent of U of Alabama or worse….makes no sense to go to the UK to go a school like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
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Bingo….take a uni like Exeter. Russel group. Decent on some subjects being top 10 in their League tables….for a kid who is independent and the best US school you got in is a t75-t120 OOS or Private, I would go to Exeter in a minute. Amazing campus, small town, just 2 hrs from London and you will spend ~66k Pounds in Tuition for your education…ALL of it. There is nothing this cheap in the US for the same quality unless it is an In-state option…
Exeter is excellent as is Durham, LSE, UCL, Kings London, York, Bristol, Edinburgh, the key universities where ox-bridge rejects tend to land.
But it will cost you more than $66k all in. International fees have gone up again this year so instead of 22k per year its looking more like 28-35k pounds per year tuition, depending on course, plus living costs (accommodation / food / books / expenses). In some of these cities accommodation is scarce because the university has expanded way beyond it's original capacity and the housing has not caught up with it. York was for a long time only housing 3000 undergrads. This number is now closer to 30k undergrads and while some new building / housing has been developed, not enough of it across the board which pushes up prices. Same deal in Bristol and London.
Anonymous wrote:Never even heard of U of Westminster….what is this about?