
*Randbemerkung zu Brasilien: Obwohl es in Brasilien kostenpflichtig ist, ist es schwierig, an kostenlosen Universitäten zu studieren
*Randbemerkung zu Argentinien: Es ist sehr einfach, an Universitäten aufgenommen zu werden, aber die kostenlosen öffentlichen Universitäten sind die schwierigsten im Land, es dauert viele Jahre und die Lehrer stellen in den Abschlussprüfungen sehr hohe Anforderungen
Von Pampa_of_Argentina
47 Kommentare
Surprising to see so little green
Like, isnt so hard to get in a free university here in Brazil. Of course, have some courses harden then others (medicine and idk, history)
Why Scotland only and not all of UK?
In Brasil, it depends on the subject. Regardless, you have to do a standardized test called ‘vestibular’.
Here, the best universities in the country are the public ones.
This map is bullshit, Russia literally has free higher education as long as you can clear state exams
(source: am Russian)
Many places come close to free also. When I did my first year of uni in Italy i only paid 32€
A legend would be nice. What’s the difference between light and dark green?
Wrong.. Morocco has free university
Where’s the key labowski?
Iraq should be green.
Your data is bad and you should feel bad!
BS map, 3rd level education is also free in Ireland.
In France it’s like 200€ / year, and many students are exempted, so it’s nearly free (for public university, private schools exist too)
France is free. But for admission fees.
In many European countries it’s only free in the national language. In many of them, tuition only costs $1-2k a year (some even less). For international students it costs way more obviously.
Another inaccurate map in this sub. What a surprise! Colombia has free education since kids are still sucking at their mama’s titties until they get their first university degree. The second degree is not free though.
It would be cool if this sub weren’t constantly full of the worst data interpretation and mistaken representations imaginable. If someone were teaching an intro to data class, the whole sub would be a case study in mistakes.
In Mexico public universities aren’t free but what you pay in most of them is less than what you pay for your metro or bus rides in a semester, they’re incredibly cheap.
I think many other developed and developing countries have very cheap higher education too but as they’re probably not 100% free, they can’t be on this map.
In Ireland you dont pay for college unless your parent earn more than €64k a year with one child. It also scales and a family of 4 kids gets it free if the parents income is below €120k a year.
Even after this if a higher earning family its a capped fee of €3k for college with multiple other grants and reliefs available.
Denmark isn’t fully green?
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/2c/91/7d/2c917d8d329ebb1b97b6a9442baf2186.jpg
In France, it only costs a few hundred euros if you don’t have a stock exchange. Otherwise it’s free.
Knowing that the social criteria to be eligible for the ministry scholarship are very low.
I am an only child with a mother who earns a very good living and I was on scholarship 4 out of 5 years.
SUCH BULLSHIT
This is not accurate. I studied university in a public one in Peru. Probably 20$ per year max (2 academic semesters) for some registering services.
In France, a year of uni only costs 275€
Now do a map of the best universities around the world.
Is this map showing state mandated universal free high education? Because I know of a lot of countries with public high education where the only requirement is that you made the cut, and in some cases a minimun entrance fee
Brazil has free universal healthcare, free public university, but we still manage to be a poor country, I don’t get it
In Ireland college is free if your parents earn under a certain income, if you are a mature student who claims social benefits, or if you are on any sort of social welfare benefit. Even if you have to pay it costs only about €2000 per year anyways. During the recession in 2010 I was out of work so decided to do a business degree while claiming unemployment, not only was my college free for 4 years but they paid me to attend with a grant and weekly money, I could also work part time during this time to earn extra money and they paid most of my rent in a one bedroom apt. After I got my degree I found work right away and probably paid back what they gave me with my taxes so everyone’s a winner. In the US they would probably call that socialism..
It’s free in Sri Lanka
Not free in Germany. 200-400 Euro per semester.
In France I paid my tuition about 200€/year. Nearly free. Like many on this map.
It’s free in iraq too 🤨🤨🤨🤨
If you’re clever, you can get a free bachelors from a US university too
Turkey is free too
Honestly university should be the next step after high school and should be funded accordingly
>Side note regarding Brazil: although it is fee in Brazil, it is hard to get into free universities
It’s not hard, there’s just a limited number of them. (Source, I got into one, despite being a certified dum dum.)
It’s free in Algeria as well
You forgot Scotland
It’s free in Turkey too unless you are a foreign student than yeah it is not free, but also there are private unis too which if you get high score in yks( Entrance to Higher Educatian Test) than they are free too
There’s free universities in the United States. SIPI in Albuquerque is free for American Indians. And it’s paid for with public funds.
Isn’t norway not free for int? Only for EEA/Swiss residents?
Sarawak, Malaysia is providing free tertiary education for its citizens starting next year. The only state able to do so in Malaysia.
>*Side note regarding Brazil: although it is fee in Brazil, it is hard to get into free universities
It’s not, really. It’s hard to get in Med School in all universities (>90% ENEM score) or in Engineering courses in only the very top universities (>85% ENEM or different Vestibular score). A 65-70% grade in the „National High School Exam“ will get you inside pretty much 90% of the available courses.
in saudi you get 250$ allowance when you go to uni. only for citizens tho
Nothing is free. This is still paid for in some way, usually taxes
Not actually free in Norway, I had a €20 or so semester fee, I know I had it hard.