VBIO

Gemeinsam für die Biowissenschaften

Werden Sie Mitglied im VBIO und machen Sie mit!

How will the COVID-19 crisis affect the global rankings?

Leererhörsaal, blick an die Tafel
Bild von Michal Jarmoluk auf Pixabay

The first half of 2020 has been dramatic for higher education. The COVID-19 pandemic has shut down schools and universities across the world and its impact will continue for years to come. As they cautiously reopen, universities will find themselves in a world rather different from the one they knew at the beginning of the year. Prediction is always risky, but some trends are likely to emerge and to intensify.

The most obvious is that international student mobility will be reduced. Even if there is a revival in 2021 or 2022, it will almost certainly be limited and patchy. Mainland Chinese students, in particular, are unlikely to return to Western universities in significant numbers, even if there is an uptick of Hong Kong students moving to the West.


There will probably be a shift to new destination countries. Those students who continue to move abroad will head to places that have done better in controlling the pandemic such as Germany, South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and New Zealand.

(University Worls News)

Read more

weitere VBIO News
Holotype of Cabarzichnus pulchrus.

Älteste Hautabdrücke von Reptilien im Thüringer Wald entdeckt

Weiterlesen
Foto eines Tierpflegers, der die ungewöhnlichen Tasthaare berührt, die den Rüssel eines asiatischen Elefanten bedecken.

Elefantenrüsselhaare sind äußerst materialintelligent

Weiterlesen
Proben des gereinigten Proteins, bei der grünen Probe hat der Farbwechsel noch nicht stattgefunden, bei der rötlichen Probe ist er gut sichtbar.

Funktionsbeschichtung aus Proteinen und Bakterien: Lebendes Material macht schädliches UV-Licht sichtbar

Weiterlesen