Visa changes could cost UK

The government’s proposed changes to the student visa system could cause economic damage to the UK by destroying jobs in higher education and beyond, the head of Universities UK has warned.

Steve Smith, who is also vice-chancellor of the University of Exeter, spoke of his fears in an interview last week at the British Council’s Going Global conference in Hong Kong, where he was keen to tell the international audience that the UK was still “open for business” despite impending visa restrictions.

The coalition government is expected to announce its visa changes for students this week, implementing the Conservative Party’s manifesto commitment to cut immigration to the UK.

Professor Smith said UUK has had an official “embedded” in the UK Border Agency in a bid to ensure that the sector’s key points are not overlooked.

UUK believes it is vital to preserve the progression route for overseas students who enter the UK to study A levels or language courses at colleges and then stay on for university.

“I don’t think for a second that the government wants to damage UK higher education,” Professor Smith said. “But they do seem to think that higher education starts at university and [seem] not [to] understand the pathway point.”

On the potential impact of a sharp drop in student numbers caused by severe immigration restrictions, he added: “We think the impact could be really damaging to the UK economy. It is about jobs…Where else are growth and jobs coming from? They are not just academic and professional services jobs, but also jobs in the cities where the students are.”

Professor Smith’s message for delegates in his conference speech was more positive.

He said that “despite the headlines, the UK continues to welcome international students, and will do in increasing numbers”.

Joanna Newman, the new director of UUK’s International and Europe Unit, said the potential economic impact of the changes and the low rate of visa abuse by higher education students had not been communicated effectively.

The International and Europe Unit could be a channel for these messages, she said, adding that there should also be an emphasis on helping more UK students to study abroad.

have stayed in UK illegally

It calls on the UK Border Agency to do more to check that migrants leave the UK if they have no right to remain.

"The agency's points based system is not yet delivering its full potential for value for money. While it is well designed and adaptable, the underlying systems and management information are in need of improvement," audit office head Amyas Morse said.

"Customer services do not meet customer expectations and the agency cannot easily identify and follow up individuals whose visas have expired," he added.

The study's conclusions show that the agency has some contact details for an estimated 181,000 failed applicants but that it "cannot be sure how many have left the UK."

Poor information systems are also undermining the agency's ability to manage the risk that sponsors are failing to comply with immigration rules, the audit office study concludes.

The border agency rates 96 percent of its 22,000 sponsoring employers as compliant but is unable to say how many it has visited to confirm this, according to the study.

Immigration Minister Damian Green said the report shows exactly why reforms to the UK's immigration system are needed.

Radical reforms are already being introduced, including "the introduction of an annual limit on economic migrants, sweeping changes to the student visa system, and a shake-up of the family and settlement route," he said.

"We are also committed to reintroducing exit checks by 2015," Green said, adding: "Counting people in and out of the country will give us better control over those that overstay."

"We are determined to reduce net migration to the tens of thousands, and clamp down on immigration abuses."

India upset over UK visa rules

India has pr
otested against a proposed new UK student visa regime that could crush the dreams of tens of thousands of Indian students who gain admission to British universities each year. The UK is today th
e top destination for Indian students seeking higher education abroad. The human resour
ce development (HRD) ministry and the ministry of external affairs (MEA) have warned British authorities that the proposed new rules could severely reduce the number of Indian students going to the UK. The UK issued student visas to about 57,500 Indians last year, as opposed to about 32,000 by t he US.

Concerns over three controversial rules in the proposed UK regime were communicated to the UK Border Agen

cy (UKBA) - the British authority in charge of visa and immigration - recently, top government officials have told HT .

Higher education

secretary Vibha Puri Das also met British High Commissioner Richard Stagg last week to register India's concerns, the sources said. China is also understood to have objected to the proposed new rules. The UK recently also independently unveiled a work-visa rule barring non-European Union students from working there for two years after graduating from a British university.

The proposed new student visa regime which India has objected to bars students except for courses offering a higher degree than already obtained by the student. This move would prevent an M.Tech, M.A. or M.Sc. from studying an MBA or any other master's programme in the UK, killing lateral movement of students across streams, the HRD ministry has told the UK.

The new rules also make it mandatory for foreign students to leave the UK after obtaining one degree before they can apply for another in the UK - a move that will prove financially burdensome for students, officials argued. Students keen on pursuing another course in the UK typically apply for the second programme while they are completing the programme for which they originally came to the UK.

A third new rule will put student visa applicants through a tougher English language test than at present - a move that government officials are describing as unjustified and discriminatory against students relatively weak at communicating in English.

UK universities set to lose $1.6bn from student visa cut


he UK's Higher Education Policy Institute, an independent thinktank, has joined a chorus of protest at government proposals to tackle illegal immigration by restricting student visas.

Last month Hepi said plans to limit student visas and raise the English language skills requirements of applicants would have "dire consequences" for universities.

The report's author, Professor Edward Acton, vice-chancellor of the University of East Anglia, told the BBC that government proposals to reduce the number of students studying below degree level would not only cut fee income by about $1.6bn, but would also reduce subsequent undergraduate numbers.

He said more than 40% of international students at UK universities arrive via a pre-university pathway course, and he warned that 70% of recruits to these courses would be barred by the language requirement change.

The report says: "For recruitment from countries where English is not one of the official languages, combining academic preparation with intensive English language tuition from native speakers is essential.

"Sever the link and the damage inflicted on our universities will be severe."

Children in rural Poland falling behind in English

School-age students in rural areas of Poland are falling behind their urban counterparts in English language skills, a study comparing education outcomes across populations has revealed.

The survey, entitled English – Whose Opportunity?, was carried out by the Polish Forum for Development Initiatives and the European Fund for Rural Development.

It found that the English language exam scores of junior secondary school students in rural areas were 6.5 points lower than similar cohorts in larger towns and cities.

There was no significant difference in the performance of both groups in humanities and science tests. The report linked the poor performance to a lack of co-ordinated support for English language teaching in rural areas. It recommended introducing new teaching methods and for additional time to be allocated to English lessons.

Japan opens up to Indian teachers

A major trade agreement signed between Japan and India last month is likely to make it easier for English language teachers from India to work in Japan.

The pact covers trade in goods, services and investment and is expected to reduce tariffs in about 90% of trade between the two countries over the next 10 years.

In return for easing export of goods and services to India, Japan has agreed to liberalise the temporary movement of English language teachers, yoga practitioners, classical music performers and chefs.

Innovators take a bow at ELTons awards in London

Excellence in English language teaching was celebrated at the annual British Council awards for innovation, better known as the ELTons, held in London in February.

London-based language school United International College (UIC) was one of three recipients of the UK Award for Innovation, for its Communication Station resource incorporating radio and broadcast skills into lessons. The BBC picked up the other UK awards for two web-based learning resources, BBCe!, a bilingual radio show broadcast in Egypt, and Rinku's World, a multi-platform teaching resource for Bangladesh.

Abax ELT, based in Japan, won the Cambridge ESOL International Award for Innovation for its Fiction in Action: Whodunit. The Macmillan Education Award for Innovative Writing went to Simona Petrescu, from Romania, for her proposal for a course based on human resources.

Brian Abbs and Ingrid Freebairn were awarded the council's Lifetime Achievement award for their ground-breaking textbook series.

Glaswegian tops 'most attractive' English poll

Glaswegians have the most attractive accent for Japanese speakers of English, a study has revealed.

The Glasgow accent came out on top for social attractiveness to Japanese people learning to speak English, found a survey by Northumbria University, England.

Robert McKenzie, senior lecturer in sociolinguistics at the university, questioned more than 500 people to study how worldwide perceptions of the English language are changing.

The six accents used were from Alabama and Ohio in America, the Glasgow dialect, Scottish standard English, moderately accented Japanese English and heavily accented Japanese English.

Dr McKenzie said: "It seems to be that globalisation, and especially the resultant worldwide spread of English-language media, are influencing non-native perceptions of the qualities associated with various forms of spoken English."

Wedding Cake,honeymood wedding superstitons

wedding cake
It is traditional at weddings to have a special wedding cake at the reception, often with two or more tiers - each tier may be made of adifferent type of cake to satisfy the tastes of all your wedding guests. It's also customary for the top tier of a three or four tier cake to be kept aside for the christening of the couples first child.

The Honeymoon
It is traditional for the bride and groom to go away on a holiday, called a Honeymoon, after the wedding has taken place.
Interesting factCenturies ago it was customary for the Bride and Bridegroom to drink mead made from honey, for a month after the wedding. A month was known as a moon, hence honeymoon.

Wedding Superstitions
Bride and groom must not meet on the day of the wedding except at the altar.
The bride should never wear her complete wedding clothes before the day.
For good luck the bride should wear “something borrowed, something blue, something old and something new”.
The husband should carry his new wife over the threshold of their home.




Dating and marriage customs in england

Marriage in uk
Datting
Dating usually starts in the teenage years, although some kids at primary school age are now having boy and girl friends from the age of 8 years and upwards.
Traditionally, girls used to wait for the lads to make the first move, but these days equality rules.
Marriage
What is the legal age for marrying in the UK?
In England and Wales people cannot marry if they are aged 16 or 17 and do not have parental consent. (In the UK, the age of sexual consent for women is 16).
In Scotland both parties must be at least 16 years of age (parental consent is not required).
A marriage can take place in a Register Office
a church of the Church of England, Church in Wales, Church of Ireland, Presbyterian or Roman Catholic Church in N. Ireland
a synagogue or any other private place if both partners are Jewish
any other religious building provided that the person marrying the couple is registered by the Registrar General
premises approved by the local authority
a place where one partner is seriously ill and not expected to recover
the home of one of the partners if the partner is housebound, for example, has serious disabilities or is agoraphobic
a hospital, if one of the partners is unable to leave or is detained there as a psychiatric inpatient
a prison, if one partner is a prisoner.

in uk

FAMILY LIFE IN UK

The family in Britain is changing. The once typical British family headed by two parents has undergone substantial changes during the twentieth century. In particular there has been a rise in the number of single-person households, which increased from 18 to 29 per cent of all households between 1971 and 2002. By the year 2020, it is estimated that there will be more single people than married people. Fifty years ago this would have been socially unacceptable in Britain.
In the past, people got married and stayed married. Divorce was very difficult, expensive and took a long time. Today, people's views on marriage are changing. Many couples, mostly in their twenties or thirties, live together (cohabit) without getting married. Only about 60% of these couples will eventually get married.
In the past, people married before they had children, but now about 40% of children in Britain are born to unmarried (cohabiting) parents. In 2000, around a quarter of unmarried people between the ages of 16 and 59 were cohabiting in Great Britain. Cohabiting couples are also starting families without first being married. Before 1960 this was very unusual, but in 2001 around 23 per cent of births in the UK were to cohabiting couples.
People are generally getting married at a later age now and many women do not want to have children immediately. They prefer to concentrate on their jobs and put off having a baby until late thirties.
The number of single-parent families is increasing. This is mainly due to more marriages ending in divorce, but some women are also choosing to have children as lone parents without being married.