Tuition fees for studying abroad are generally high. For graduate students, in South Korea, Japan or Hong Kong and Singapore, the annual tuition and living expenses are about 6,543,800 yuan. However, some education systems range from one year or two to three years. The annual tuition and living expenses are about 250,000-300,000 RMB in the United States, about 200,000 RMB in Canada, about 250,000-300,000 RMB in Britain, and almost the same in Australia and Canada.
It costs more than 100,000 yuan, and taking the subway in Britain is 100. Going to England, the subway is a luxury. I think even washing dishes or other part-time jobs are a little stretched. High tuition fees keep children with dreams of studying abroad out of the door. China is mostly an ordinary family with an annual income of more than 100,000 yuan, but the tuition is still unaffordable. Even middle-class families have to spend most of their savings for their children to study abroad, so studying abroad is the choice of "rich people".
Unless you are very talented, the Sat is close to perfect score, or IELTS 8.5, the full scholarship is yours. A: There is a girl in the middle and high school who was admitted to Harvard with a full scholarship of RMB 6,543,800+RMB 2,000, basically without paying her own money. For children in ordinary families, even if they apply for a scholarship, it is not full, and the cost is half, which is not a small burden. Therefore, ordinary people have no choice but to study abroad, except of course a few talented people.
Therefore, high scholarships can only make a lot of people wait for the sea to sigh and lament their origins. Most people who go abroad are rich, which leaves an impression on foreign universities: China people are not short of money! No matter how high the tuition is, they can't stop coming. This is true. I think studying abroad is good. Most people know that the education system abroad is much more developed than that at home. But not everyone can afford the tuition.