In the media

In the media

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1-10 of 235 results

  • Newspaper

    Mauritania moves to digitize national exams to improve transparency

    Mauritania

    Press

    Adoni Conrad Quenum - Ecofin agency

    Mauritania is planning to digitize its national exams and competitive entrance tests to improve transparency, fairness, and reliability. The initiative, led by the Education and Digital Transformation ministries, will introduce digital tools across the exam process, from setting papers to grading, to reduce errors and increase traceability. A phased rollout with testing stages has been agreed to ensure system stability before large-scale use.

  • Newspaper

    Corruption continues to undermine inclusive education across Africa, report warns

    Zimbabwe

    Press

    Jean d’Amour Mugabo - Pan African Visions

    A new Transparency International policy brief warns that corruption in African education systems disproportionately harms women, girls, marginalised groups and learners with disabilities. Bribery, sextortion, payroll fraud and mismanagement of resources remain widespread at the service delivery level. Country findings show high bribery in school admissions in the DRC (56%) and Zimbabwe (72%), payroll fraud in Ghana, exclusion of disabled learners in Madagascar, and integrity risks in Rwanda’s grading and school programmes. Weak oversight and accountability mechanisms are identified as key drivers of persistent corruption.

  • Newspaper

    Inside the ‘ghost student’ scam using identity theft to steal financial aid

    USA

    Press

    Steve Osunsami; Lucien Bruggeman; Emily Kohlberg - ABC News

    An ABC investigation revealed large‑scale financial aid fraud in which scammers used stolen identities to enrol as “ghost students”. Once registered, they applied for grants and loans and vanished with the funds, leaving victims unknowingly burdened with debt. Officials report over 200 active investigations, with AI‑generated applications worsening the problem. Community colleges remain key targets due to open‑enrolment processes. In California alone, nearly a third of community college applicants in 2024 were flagged as fraudulent.

  • Newspaper

    EFF Youth Command lays charges over sale of university placements

    South Africa

    Press

    - YFM

    The Economic Freedom Fighters Youth Command in South Africa opened a criminal case against individuals accused of running a syndicate that sells university and TVET college placements. A spokesperson claims that students were charged between R3,000 and R4,000 for admission, accommodation and bursaries, facilitated through WhatsApp groups and apparent internal contacts. Various institutions across South Africa are alleged to be involved in the actions. Evidence submitted to police includes messages, payment records and testimonies from victims.

  • Newspaper

    Supreme Court orders audit of Indian private universities over governance and transparency issues

    India

    Press

    Akshita Jolly - India Today

    A Supreme Court mandate has prompted an expansive audit of private, non-government, and deemed universities in India. The directive follows a student's conflict over a name amendment, revealing larger concerns about administrative transparency and governance within these institutions, and in particular the prevalence of slow or ineffective grievance response systems within Indian higher education. Other areas where opaque practices are often reported, such as admission, recruitment and use of funds, are also now under direct examination.

  • Newspaper

    Australia flags rising student visa fraud and warns universities on document checks

    Australia

    Press

    Lubna Kably - Times of India

    The Australian Department of Home Affairs has published a new Student Visa Integrity Alert in response to multiple cases of applicants attempting to enrol in university programmes with fake passports, enrolment certificates or exam results. While higher education institutions are dependent on incoming international students, the Department warns that admitting students based on fraudulent documents can undermine trust in Australia’s academic programmes.

  • Newspaper

    Education Ministry to review School Placement System for greater transparency, fairness

    Ghana

    Press

    - Modern Ghana

    A technical review of Ghana’s computerized school placement system is underway as the Ministry of Education seeks to boost transparency, fairness, and efficiency in senior high school admissions. The review, led by a team of education managers, ICT experts, and student and parent representatives, aims to modernize the system and restore public confidence in one of the country’s key education gateways.

  • Newspaper

    Mounting admissions fraud cases are threat to Hong Kong HE

    Hong Kong China

    Press

    Yojana Sharma - University World News

    Hong Kong universities face a growing challenge of admissions fraud, with police receiving 126 reports of allegedly fraudulent academic qualifications in just the first seven months of 2025. Universities reported rejecting several hundred applications suspected of falsified credentials. Authorities are introducing AI-assisted verification, rigorous checks, and anti-fraud training to safeguard higher education integrity.

  • Newspaper

    ChatGPT exam scandal: How are Belgian universities dealing with AI?

    Belgium

    Press

    Rita Alves - The Brussels Times

    In Belgium, three students were caught using ChatGPT during the Flemish medical entrance exam, the first explicitly recorded AI fraud-scandal in this context. This year’s passing rate (47%) for the exam was unusually high. Universities are taking varied approaches, prohibiting AI in exams, but also introducing training, clearer guidelines, and new assessment methods to ensure students use these tools responsibly.

  • Newspaper

    Bill regulating fees in private schools to bring greater transparency, accountability: Delhi CM

    India

    Press

    - The Indian Express

    Delhi’s new 2025 School Education Bill regulates private school fees to prevent arbitrary hikes, ensure accountability, and protect parents. The law grants education authorities powers to freeze accounts or seize property of non-compliant schools. Nearly 300 schools receiving land at concessional rates will also be covered, addressing transparency, governance, and corruption concerns.

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