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Pakistan Education Market: More Pakistani Students Studying Abroad

RiazHaq

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Although the growth in the total number Pakistanis studying abroad has slowed since the terrorist attacks of Sept 11, 2001 in the United States, the world's sixth most populous nation continues to be among the leading sources of foreign students in America, Europe, Australia and new emerging higher education destinations in Asia.

As the number of Pakistani students in the United States has declined from a peak of 8,644 students (ranked 13th) in 2001-02 to 5,222 in 2009-10 (ranked 23rd), English-speaking OECD nations of the United Kingdom and Australia have become the biggest beneficiaries getting increasing market share of the Pakistan education market. Both nations have benefited in spite of the fact that the UK and Australian visa rejection rates for Pakistanis are higher than for students from other nations.

A recent British Council report says that 9,815 Pakistani students (Source: HESA) put Pakistan among one of the top six countries which account for 54 percent of the UK’s (non-EU) international students. Since September 2001, it has become the market leader, a place previously held by the US. Other European countries have also become quite active in marketing their education in Pakistan.

There is also an upward trend in Pakistani students studying in Australia. 8,458 Pakistani students studied in Australia in 2009/2010, increase of 11/4% over 2008/2009 (Source: AEI).

The US is beginning to pick up more of the Pakistani education market share after a significant decline since 911, with its simplified visa procedures and increased marketing efforts, and the excellent scholarship opportunities that they have to offer Pakistani students. Pakistan now has the world's largest Fulbright Scholarship Program with over 200 scholarships offered to Pakistani students for advanced degrees in 2011.

Beyond the traditional destinations in OECD nations, newly industrialized countries such as Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore are more visible in Pakistan and perceived as offering quality education at lower prices.

Pakistanis take education seriously. They spend more time in schools and colleges and graduate at a higher rates than their Indian counterparts in 15+ age group, according to a report on educational achievement by Harvard University researchers Robert Barro and Jong-Wha Lee.

With rising urban middle class, there is substantial and growing demand in Pakistan from students, parents and employers for private quality higher education along with a willingness and capacity to pay relatively high tuition and fees, according to the findings of Austrade, an Australian govt agency promoting trade. Private institutions are seeking affiliations with universities abroad to ensure they offer information and training that is of international standards.

Trans-national education (TNE) is a growing market in Pakistan and recent data shows evidence of over 40 such programs running successfully in affiliation with British universities at undergraduate and graduate level, according to The British Council. Overall, the UK takes about 65 per cent of the TNE market in Pakistan.

Haq's Musings: Higher Education: Pakistani Students Abroad
 
Currently i'm going to the University of Waterloo in Canada and I have seen a lot of Pakistani students whom had come directly from Pakistan. I don't understand how they afford to live here because i as a student and as a citizen get benefits from the government but still comes out to be expensive and I have to work over the summer to cut down the costs. Its strange how those students afford all that with practically no experience. "hum gareeb logo hain ameer moolk kay ander oor vo ameer hain gareeb moolk kay ander." :meeting:
 
Currently i'm going to the University of Waterloo in Canada and I have seen a lot of Pakistani students whom had come directly from Pakistan. I don't understand how they afford to live here because i as a student and as a citizen get benefits from the government but still comes out to be expensive and I have to work over the summer to cut down the costs. Its strange how those students afford all that with practically no experience. "hum gareeb logo hain ameer moolk kay ander oor vo ameer hain gareeb moolk kay ander." :meeting:
you are right.i also want to go Australia but i m afraid of expenditure and costly life
 
you are right.i also want to go Australia but i m afraid of expenditure and costly life

then you can come to malaysia as here living expense are not too high as comapre to pakistan near about 20k to 25k per month , but its better you should come here for post grad .
 
Currently i'm going to the University of Waterloo in Canada and I have seen a lot of Pakistani students whom had come directly from Pakistan. I don't understand how they afford to live here because i as a student and as a citizen get benefits from the government but still comes out to be expensive and I have to work over the summer to cut down the costs. Its strange how those students afford all that with practically no experience. "hum gareeb logo hain ameer moolk kay ander oor vo ameer hain gareeb moolk kay ander." :meeting:

Most graduate students who are accepted at reputable universities can qualify for some form of assistance and tuition waiver as TAs and RAs in North America.

There are also scholarships available. Please check out this link:

http://www.pakalumni.com/forum/categories/1119293:Category:4101/listForCategory
 
Here's an Express Tribune story of a Pakistani young man of humble origins helping terror victims after studying Emergency Medicine at Yale:

.Today, Razzak is a renowned emergency medicine expert and the executive director of the Aman Foundation. He started his schooling at a humble primary school in Lyari, completing his secondary education from Nasira School in Depot Lines. Not one to be held back, the hard-working student subsequently attended Adamjee Science College where his impressive grades and unbounded enthusiasm won him a scholarship at the prestigious Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH), the top private medical institution in the country.
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In collaboration with the Edhi Ambulance Service, an arm of the philanthropic Edhi organisation and the largest volunteer ambulance network in the world, he researched and analysed road traffic injuries and emergency cases. Edhi had a mountain of documentation for every call and every case it had handled in the last two decades. The downside? None of it was digitised, so he spent days sifting through it manually.

The experience stayed with him, and the data revealed a disturbing pattern. Gruesome injuries, often suffered by the poorest members of society, were often improperly handled by well-meaning doctors, simply because of a lack of know-how. These mistakes frequently, and literally, led to the loss of life and limb.

Yet, Razzak soon realised that he needed more professional training and specialisation courses before he could progress further. He sat for the US Medical Licensing Exams (MLE) and had observations at the Beth Israel Medical Centre, New York, and the Yale-New Haven Hospital, Connecticut. In 1996, his residency and training programme at Yale University’s School of Medicine started and in 1999, he was given the ‘Best Trainee’ award by the State of Connecticut.

On the personal front, Yale was also important for the doctor since he met his future wife there. Following graduation, the two stayed in the US for a few years, always looking forward to the time when they would return home. “The plan was always to come back,” says Razzak. “That’s why we never bought a house, never completely settled in.”

Before they could come back, Razzak did his PhD in Public Health at the world-renowned Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, where he focused on the use of ambulance data for monitoring road traffic accidents. Finally, in 2005, the studious boy from Kharadar returned to Pakistan as a successful, qualified expert in emergency medicine.

He joined his alma mater, AKUH as a faculty member and went on to successfully found Pakistan’s first emergency medicine service (EMS) training programme at the university. “There were many doctors who were awarded their degrees without ever administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) as it wasn’t a requirement,” he reveals.

This changed when his EMS programme became a mandatory rotation that all students had to serve. Subsequently, Razzak went on to build and head a new emergency department. Yet, the battle was just half won. Students in the new department faced a dilemma, similar to the one Razzak had as a student. They were required to go to the United Kingdom to sit for their exam, otherwise they would not be considered qualified.
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Determined to remove, for others, the hurdles that he himself had crossed only after many toils, Razzak collaborated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan (CPSP) to organise a curriculum for the specialised field. The first batch for this course was enrolled last year. Now students wanting to specialise in emergency medicine will be able to obtain certification in their chosen field, without having to travel abroad....

http://tribune.com.pk/story/300042/positive-pakistani-call-of-duty/
 
What can we say, as there are some students that what to learn top class education and they have no choice instead to move to abroad and most of us want a bright future to study and gain nationality in abroad.... By the way my Brother is looking to move towards, N.Z/Aussie/Canada, can you tell the procedure and the time taken by a student to gain nationality there all of them separately, explain them plz...
 
What can we say, as there are some students that what to learn top class education and they have no choice instead to move to abroad and most of us want a bright future to study and gain nationality in abroad.... By the way my Brother is looking to move towards, N.Z/Aussie/Canada, can you tell the procedure and the time taken by a student to gain nationality there all of them separately, explain them plz...

I had a Pakistani roommate who came from Lahore this year. Even with the student visa, this guy was 3 months late after school start. So the point is, Canadian have somehow made it difficult for any Pakistani to come here. I just hope for the good/best for anyone who is trying.
 
Education is key to building nation and this artcile is great. Pakistan needs to keep the momentum for higher and good quality education. This will benefit the country is future.
 
Nothing wrong in students, studying abroad, however our educational facilities in Pakistan, are extremely neglected and of poor quality. Pakistani Officials, should go to Sweden/Iran and China, all of whom have brilliant educational facilities and hopefully after reviewing each system adopt a method that would best suit, Pakistan.

Sadly, Zardari is more worried about where his next 10% is going to come from....
 
Nothing wrong in students, studying abroad, however our educational facilities in Pakistan, are extremely neglected and of poor quality. Pakistani Officials, should go to Sweden/Iran and China, all of whom have brilliant educational facilities and hopefully after reviewing each system adopt a method that would best suit, Pakistan.

Sadly, Zardari is more worried about where his next 10% is going to come from....

Please don't generalize. Pakistan has some very good schools producing graduates who compete with the best and the brightest around the world.....I see them every day here in Silicon Valley.

Examples include NED, NUST, LUMS, IBA, AKU, Dow, QAU, UET Lahore, etc.
 
Students are not going to abroad for study only,most up to 90% will never return to Pakistan because there are not many jobs in Pakistan.Once we have a flourishing economy,then reverse brain drain will happen as its happening in India,China and Vietnam.
 
Students are not going to abroad for study only,most up to 90% will never return to Pakistan because there are not many jobs in Pakistan.Once we have a flourishing economy,then reverse brain drain will happen as its happening in India,China and Vietnam.
What are you talking about? There are no jobs in the west my friend. Pakistan is a developing country therefore there is a lot of potential. I myself will come to Pakistan once I finish education. People in Pakistan have no idea . Most probably they'd be taxi drivers here due to present situation. They will be making a great mistake if they think that the west is powerful.
 
^^There are jobs in Pakistan, but the salary is quite low. On the other hand there are still jobs in the West for the smart and talented.

I came across an article about IBA, which is apparently one of top institutions in Pakistan, and the salary offered to the graduates is quite appalling.

KARACHI: About 89% graduates of the latest batch of MBAs have already found jobs, said Dr Ishrat Husain, dean and director of the Institute of Business Administration (IBA), while addressing the 12th convocation of the institute here on Friday. He said recent IBA MBAs received on average the monthly salary of Rs42,000, which was significantly higher than what the graduates of other business schools received.

As for the BBA programme, Husain said 74% graduates had found jobs as of November. “Ten per cent of the BBA graduates have joined family businesses, 7% decided to pursue higher studies, and only 9% are currently looking for jobs.” He said the average monthly salary of an IBA graduate with a BBA degree was Rs33,000.

IBA says goodbye to batch of 2011, barely out of school and landing in their first jobs – The Express Tribune
 
Please don't generalize. Pakistan has some very good schools producing graduates who compete with the best and the brightest around the world.....I see them every day here in Silicon Valley.

Examples include NED, NUST, LUMS, IBA, AKU, Dow, QAU, UET Lahore, etc.
how can u forget fast giki and piyass
 

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