In the media

In the media

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1-10 of 106 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

    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

    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.

  • Newspaper

    Ministry allocates funds for fairer university admissions

    Korea R

    Press

    Yumi Jeung - University World News

    South Korea's Ministry of Education allocated KRW58.5 billion (US$40.2 million) to enhance ethical and transparent university admissions. A 2024 report indicated students from top 20% income backgrounds were 5.4 times more likely to enter prestigious universities, with 75% of this gap linked to wealth. Funds for 80 universities aim to reduce reliance on private education, promoting fairness in selection processes.

  • Newspaper

    Universities agree to settle in admissions collusion suit

    USA

    Press

    CNN - University World News

    Five universities in the United States agreed to settle a lawsuit accusing them of colluding on financial aid and admissions violations, according to new court filings. Yale, Columbia, Duke, Brown and Emory universities will pay a combined US$104.5 million to settle their portions of the case, which was brought by five former students against more than a dozen schools. The suit alleges the universities violated antitrust law when they ignored their pledge to not weigh a student’s ability to pay tuition fees when considering whether or not to accept, a practice referred to as ‘need-blind’ admission.

  • Newspaper

    Australia expands regulatory oversight of education agents and announces new integrity measures for VET

    Australia

    Press

    - Iceg Monitor

    The Australian Government has introduced stringent measures to tackle fraud and exploitation in the student visa system. These include prohibiting agent commissions for student transfers between institutions, preventing education agents from owning stakes in Australian education providers, and establishing an integrity unit within the vocational education and training (VET) regulatory authority to monitor and enforce compliance among VET providers, emphasizing the importance of student attendance as a risk indicator.

  • Newspaper

    Zimbabwe: Education ministry sets up complaints desks to nip 'unsavoury' practices by teachers, headmasters

    Zimbabwe

    Press

    - All Africa

    The Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education (MoPSE) has established strategic command centers across the nation to address various issues plaguing schools. These include actions like dismissing students over unpaid fees, offering paid extra lessons, discriminatory enrollment practices, corporal punishment, imposing unapproved fees, and other misconduct. The MoPSE's communications and advocacy director urged stakeholders to utilize designated contacts to report any malpractices. The goal is to ensure that every school-going child receives a quality, fair, and comprehensive primary, and secondary education.

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