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November 23, 2010 | Indian, foreign students may be barred from studying in private colleges in UK | London: Tens of thousands of foreign students, including
those hailing from India, may be barred from studying in British private colleges in the wake of the David Cameron-led government taking a decision to slash immigration to curb the growing abuse of the system. Nearly half of all students coming here from abroad are coming to study a course below degree level, according to The Telegraph. There has been a 40 per cent rise in suspect colleges in the last six
months alone. A total of 56 education providers have had their licence to bring
in foreign students revoked since March 2009 but 24 of those were since May this
year. It means the number of suspect colleges is now running at 3.5 a month compared
with 2.5 a month last year. British Home Secretary Theresa May will launch a review
of student visas amid concerns that almost half the migrants who come to study
in the UK each year are not on degree courses but a range of lesser qualifications
such as A-levels and even GCSEs. May will question whether they are the "brightest
and the best" that the country wants and will make them a key target for cutting
numbers after pledging to protect those wanting to study degrees. It comes as
separate figures revealed there has been a 40 per cent rise in the number of bogus
colleges, most of which offer non-degree or language courses. The Home Secretary
will announce the review as she unveils what the annual cap on migrant workers
will be next year. Along with other measures, the cap is expected to limit numbers
arriving to around 40,000 and is the first move to meet David Cameron's pledge
of bringing overall net migration down from 196,000 to the "tens of thousands".
Meanwhile, ministers have been put under pressure from university leaders and
some Cabinet members who fear that restrictions on student numbers will damage
the UK's reputation as a world-leading centre for education, as well as cutting
the lucrative funds brought in by foreign students. However, around 130,000 foreign
students who came in the year to March were not here to study degrees, almost
half the near 280,000 non-EU students who arrived. Of those, more than 90,000
attended a private college to study anything from GCSEs to vocational qualifications.
Thousands more attended language schools. The rest either attended established
further education colleges or schools.
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