1. I'm not sure about New Zealand. Universities in Denmark that teach undergraduate courses in English, such as the University of Tiaorhus and the University of Southern Denmark. Some U-universities in the Netherlands have English undergraduate courses, and the number is relatively large. In fact, there are some good universities in Sweden, such as Lund University, Stockholm University and Yenxueping University, all of which offer undergraduate courses in English.
2. The tuition fees in the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden are similar, with an annual tuition fee of RMB 8000-65438+ million, and an annual living allowance of RMB 50000-60000, with a three-year undergraduate course.
3. Scholarship application is relatively more difficult than master's degree, mainly depending on language scores and three-year high school scores.
4. Denmark can only apply as a freshman, which means that you must take the college entrance examination and go to a domestic university. In addition, Swedish universities do not need college entrance examination results, as long as they have a high school diploma and a three-year high school transcript. Dutch universities also basically do not need college entrance examination results.