Ϲ Monitor Articles about Transnational Education /category/transnational-education-2/ Ϲ Monitor is a business development and market intelligence resource providing international education industry news and research. Wed, 04 Mar 2026 22:54:30 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 /wp-content/uploads/2022/07/cropped-LOGO_2022_FLAVICON-2-32x32.png Ϲ Monitor Articles about Transnational Education /category/transnational-education-2/ 32 32 Canada and India deepen educational ties; India repositions as an equal player in international education /2026/03/canada-and-india-deepen-educational-ties-india-repositions-as-an-equal-player-in-international-education/ Wed, 04 Mar 2026 20:16:15 +0000 /?p=47095 As with China in the 2010s, the West is waking up to the reality that India’s “emerging economy” classification is hardly enough to describe the country’s current geopolitical and innovative power. India was the world’s fastest-growing economy last year, with its +7.5% expansion beating that of the US, China, Germany, and Japan. This high rate…

The post Canada and India deepen educational ties; India repositions as an equal player in international education appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
As with China in the 2010s, the West is waking up to the reality that India’s “emerging economy” classification is hardly enough to describe the country’s current geopolitical and innovative power. India was the world’s fastest-growing economy last year, with its +7.5% expansion beating that of the US, China, Germany, and Japan. This high rate of growth has been sustained for four years, and at a time when the world’s largest economies struggle to maintain even moderate growth. The IMF predicts that India will nudge Japan out of its standing as the #4 largest economy in 2026 after displacing the UK from the top 5 in 2022.

India, like China, has cultivated an eclectic mix of political and economic alliances across multiple regions. It is as likely to partner with the US as with Russia, and it works closely with France, Germany, Japan, and Australia on joint goals in the spheres of military, technology, and trade. In 2026, India has renewed ties with Canada under Prime Minister Mark Carney after a years-long diplomatic rift.

Higher education has become another area of strength: the number of top-ranked Indian higher education institutions is growing. In the 2026 QS world ranking, 54 Indian institutions were featured. This is five times as many as in 2015.

For all these reasons – as well as US President Trump’s dismantling of the post-WWII world order of alliances – India is an increasingly coveted trade and education partner. It is now negotiating from a very different position than it has historically: a position of strength, as an equal partner.

This is nowhere more evident than in international education. India is no longer just a source of students for the Big Four (Australia, Canada, UK, and US) – it is ever more a country with which the Big Four partner under mutually beneficial terms.

This reality is well illustrated by the warming India-Canada relationship in 2026.

The Canada–India Talent and Innovation Strategy

In February 2026, representatives from 20 top Canadian institutions travelled to India to explore partnerships centred on common areas of interest and specialisation with Indian counterparts. There, the was launched by Universities Canada and Colleges and Institutes Canada (CICan). Notably, Prime Minister Carney as well as Foreign Minister Anita Anand were present in Mumbai for the official launch, signalling the importance of the Strategy to Canada.

Out of that event alone, 13 new MOUs were signed (see ). Collectively, the MOUs cover student and faculty exchanges; joint academic programming; dual credentials; embedded work experience; post-study progressions into jobs; research collaboration including potential TNE arrangements and STEM projects such as clean energy and AI; and pathways from Indian programmes to Canadian programmes.

The collaborative approach signalled by the new Strategy is more than evident in the statements prepared by Minister Anand and Universities Canada President Gabriel Miller. Count the number of times “partner” or “partnership” appear in their quotes:

Minister Anand: “Canada and India are natural partners in education, innovation and research. Canada welcomes the new Canada–India Talent and Innovation Strategy that will create opportunities for students and researchers, drive economic growth, and reinforce the strong people-to-people ties that connect our two countries.”

Mr Miller: “This is a new chapter in a very important relationship, and it demands a new partnership on higher education and research, which is vital to the future of both our countries. We are building the foundations of a long-term partnership that will create good jobs, better incomes and communities that can thrive in a highly competitive global economy.”

From left to right: University of British Columbia President, Benoit-Antoine Bacon; Dalhousie University President and Vice-Chancellor, Kimberly Brooks; University of Toronto President, Melanie Woodin; Prime Minister of Canada, the Right Honourable Mark Carney; McGill University President and Vice-Chancellor, Deep Saini; Universities Canada President and CEO, Gabriel Miller; and Colleges and Institutes Canada President and CEO, Pari Johnston. Credit: Lars Hagberg / Prime Minister’s Office. Source: CICan

An invitation to ambassadors

Also in February, Indian Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan addressed the Study in India Edu-Diplomatic Conclave 2026 in New Delhi. In attendance were ambassadors, high commissioners, and diplomats from over 50 countries. With Indian officials, participants discussed strengthening international cooperation in higher education.

As per an article in The Hindustan Times: “[Minister Pradhan] called upon the Excellencies to collaborate with India’s fast-growing, innovation-driven, multidisciplinary and access-friendly education system.”

Minister Pradhan told the assembly that “Indian institutions are deepening global engagement through joint, dual and twinning programmes, while premier universities are expanding their international footprint.” He made particular mention of the Global South and distanced it from its colonialist interpretation: “From artificial intelligence, biotechnology and semiconductors to sustainable energy, India is emerging as a trusted innovation partner, advancing a Global South model rooted in collaboration, capacity-building and shared knowledge.”

The foreign diplomats were told that India’s previously unstructured and unregulated environment for branch campuses has been replaced with “a transparent and time-bound regulatory framework” that has seen top institutions in Australia, Italy, the UK, and the US cleared within a month.

A redefinition of India

Canada’s flurry of education and research agreements with India are but an example of momentum in the Big Four to move from a purely recruitment-focused model – i.e., enrolling Indian students at home – to a partnership model. In recent months, the UK, Spain, and Australia have all sent similar delegations to build new partnerships in India.

The shift happens as:

  • The number of Indian students studying abroad in 2025 fell by -5.7% compared with 2024, according to India’s Ministry of External Affairs;
  • The number of first-time Indian students in UK institutions fell -12% in 2024/25, the second year of decline;
  • In Australia, Indian commencements were down -8% in January–September 2025;
  • In the first half of 2025, Canada granted 9,995 study permits to Indian students – down from 76,930 in the same period in 2024 and 149,875 in 2023;
  • In the US, F-1 visas issued to Indian students fell by -44% in the first half of 2025 versus the first half of 2024.

For additional background, please see:

The post Canada and India deepen educational ties; India repositions as an equal player in international education appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
China: Two-thirds of new TNE partnerships are with countries outside the Big Four /2026/02/china-two-thirds-of-new-tne-partnerships-are-with-countries-outside-the-big-four/ Wed, 04 Feb 2026 21:12:18 +0000 /?p=46936 China has been ramping up its transnational education (TNE) partnerships with other countries, with the Ministry of Education approving a record 285 new joint education institutes and programmes at the degree level in 2025. Overall, there are now 1,589 active TNE partnerships involving China and another country. Beyond volume, what is notable here is that…

The post China: Two-thirds of new TNE partnerships are with countries outside the Big Four appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
China has been ramping up its transnational education (TNE) partnerships with other countries, with the Ministry of Education approving a record 285 new joint education institutes and programmes at the degree level in 2025. Overall, there are now 1,589 active TNE partnerships involving China and another country.

Beyond volume, what is notable here is that the partnerships are with institutions from a wide array of countries. For years, the UK has been the world leader in TNE provision, but last year, it accounted for only 15% of the new partnerships approved by China’s Ministry of education. reports:

“Two-thirds (66%) of newly-approved partnerships were formed with institutions outside the ‘Big 4’ English-speaking countries that have historically been the main destinations for Chinese students studying abroad, with Russia making up the largest single group of approvals. This continues a trend towards a more diverse selection of partner countries.”

As well as Russia, active partnerships now include institutions in Italy, Germany, France, Malaysia, New Zealand, Brazil, and more.

The record number of TNE approvals in 2025 followed two years of relatively low approval rates, and the expansion is likely due to low capacity in China’s top universities and to concern over a persistently high youth unemployment rate.

The diversity of partner nations dovetails with China’s strategy of building trade and other relationships in regions all over the world. Earlier this month, we looked at trends in international research collaborations, and as with TNE, China stands out in its interest in cooperating with a wide range of countries.

In both research and TNE, the shape of China’s international partnerships conforms to its economic needs. Priority areas include AI, robotics, computing, oil and gas, and medicine, but the overall range of partnerships is well rounded and driven by the Chinese government’s identification of niche strengths.

Writing in , Futao Huang, a professor at the Research Institute for Higher Education at Hiroshima University in Japan, wrote that the evolution of Chinese TNE mirrors the growing power of China:

“China has become more assertive in linking international cooperation to its strategic industries, such as artificial intelligence, green technologies and health sciences. Joint education is increasingly valued not just as a tool for internationalisation, but as a mechanism for strategic capacity building …For foreign universities, the message is more complex. On the one hand, China remains open to collaboration and continues to approve new partnerships even in a tense global environment. On the other hand, the terms of engagement have changed. Foreign partners are expected to align their offerings with China’s strategic priorities, and partnerships are scrutinised more closely for quality and outcomes.”

China’s Ministry of Education has a target to expand enrolment in transnational education programmes (TNE) from an estimated 800,000 students currently to 8 million.

For additional background, please see:

The post China: Two-thirds of new TNE partnerships are with countries outside the Big Four appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
The surging demand for skills training in a rapidly changing global economy /2025/07/the-surging-demand-for-skills-training-in-a-rapidly-changing-global-economy/ Fri, 11 Jul 2025 04:51:20 +0000 /?p=45808 With more than 175 million users, Coursera is the largest online learning platform in the world. It currently offers more than 16,000 courses in collaboration with 370+ partners. Students can also earn a distinct credential from the platform – a Specialization – with more than 1,000 such qualifications currently on offer alongside a more limited number of…

The post The surging demand for skills training in a rapidly changing global economy appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
With more than 175 million users, Coursera is the largest online learning platform in the world. It currently offers more than 16,000 courses in collaboration with 370+ partners. Students can also earn a distinct credential from the platform – a Specialization – with more than 1,000 such qualifications currently on offer alongside a more limited number of fully online degrees in computer science, data science, business, and more.

That scale of operations provides Coursera with an interesting perspective on global skills development trends, many of which are reflected in the recently released .

Among its key findings, the report highlights the importance of micro-credentials for building and maintaining an agile workforce. “By 2030, an estimated 92 million jobs will be displaced, while 170 million new ones will be created—a net gain of 78 million roles,” says the report. “Eighty-five percent of employers say they need to upskill their workforce just to keep pace, and 70% plan to hire talent with new capabilities in areas like data science, cloud computing, and GenAI. This transformation means micro-credentials are more vital than ever for establishing skills and career readiness.”

Just over nine in ten employers (91%) say that employees with micro credentials demonstrate better command of core competencies. A similar proportion of employees (94%) with micro credentials say the qualifications have accelerated their career development and allowed them to be more competitive in a quickly changing labour market.

Coursera reports that those patterns are playing out within its own enrolment base with “positive growth” in Professional Certificate enrolments in all global regions, including a 37% increase in North America (the highest globally) and 36% growth in the Middle East and North Africa year-over-year.

The report highlights as well the surging demand in some quickly expanding and evolving fields of work, notably Artificial Intelligence and Cybersecurity.

The report says of the former: “In 2023, early adopters flocked to GenAI, with approximately one person per minute enrolling in a GenAI course on Coursera – a rate that rose to eight per minute in 2024. Since then, GenAI has continued to see exceptional growth, with global enrolment in GenAI courses surging 195% year-over-year—maintaining its position as one of the most rapidly growing skill domains on our platform. To date, Coursera has recorded over 8 million GenAI enrolments, with 12 learners per minute signing up for GenAI content in 2025 across our catalog of nearly 700 GenAI courses.”

Employer surveys over that same period highlight the competitive advantage for candidates with GenAI skills, with labour market demand for roles in AI technology expected to expand by another 40% within the next four years. “Mastering AI fundamentals – from prompt engineering to large
language model (LLM) applications – is essential to remaining competitive in today’s rapidly evolving economy,” concludes the report.

Following growing worldwide concerns around data security and data protection, a similar pattern is playing out across Coursera’s Cybersecurity catalogue. Year-over-year growth in Cybersecurity courses on the platform reached 106% in Latin America, 20% in Europe, and 14% in Asia Pacific in 2025. But the report nevertheless identifies a significant and widespread labour market gap in this area: “Globally, nearly five million additional cybersecurity professionals are needed, and
two-thirds of employers cite skill gaps as a barrier to adopting emerging technology. Security
Management Specialist ranks among the top five fastest-growing roles, yet less than half of organizations feel ‘highly prepared’ to defend against AI-driven cyber threats.”

Skills training alongside degrees

“Two-thirds of employers regard skill shortages as a major barrier to business growth,” notes the report, “and in countries like Germany, unfilled vacancies cost an estimated US$339 billion (1.3% of GDP).”

The vast majority of employers surveyed by Coursera say that they have adopted or are exploring skills-based hiring – an approach that focuses on skills qualifications in combination with traditional degrees.

Those broad patterns carry with them some important implications for international educators including the need to demonstrate career linkages and outcomes at every level of study, the opportunity to combine more traditional qualifications with alternate credentials (including micro credentials), and the potential of combining more conventional modes of delivery on campus with remote learning or transnational education in order to support graduates in continuing skills training.

For additional background, please see:

The post The surging demand for skills training in a rapidly changing global economy appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
Rwanda: A prime example of “smart internationalisation” /2025/02/rwanda-a-prime-example-of-smart-internationalisation/ Thu, 13 Feb 2025 19:20:23 +0000 /?p=45046 Last week, we looked at mobility patterns in East Africa noted the growing emphasis on arrangements and frameworks that are beneficial for both sending and receiving countries. This week, we provide a little more context for understanding opportunities and challenges in Rwanda – and they are quite different than what they would be in other…

The post Rwanda: A prime example of “smart internationalisation” appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
Last week, we looked at mobility patterns in East Africa noted the growing emphasis on arrangements and frameworks that are beneficial for both sending and receiving countries. This week, we provide a little more context for understanding opportunities and challenges in Rwanda – and they are quite different than what they would be in other established outbound markets.

Fast facts

Population: Over 13.2 million, with 1.8 million in the capital city of Kigali.

Youth: Three-quarters of the population is under 35, and the median age is 19.

Geography: Rwanda is in central/eastern Africa, bordered Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Unemployment: The youth unemployment rate was 18% in 2023.

Languages: notes that “99% of Rwandans speak Kinyarwanda – a Bantu language and the country’s mother-tongue – and Rwanda has three other official languages: French, English and Swahili.” Rwandans used to favour French over English, but after the genocide of Tutsis in the late-90s and a popular perception that France did not do enough to stop it, there was a quick transition to English.

English: The EF Proficiency Index ranks Rwanda 22nd of 24 countries in Africa for English proficiency. The language of instruction is English and improving English-language proficiency is .

Religion: Christianity dominates, and the Muslim population makes up only 1% of the total.

Outbound: UNESCO counted 6,900 students from Rwanda abroad for tertiary education in 2022. That is a relatively small number, but it is growing, albeit relatively slowly. In 2023/24, the US down 4.5% from the previous year. Canada hosted 2,785 – a doubling over the previous year. Smaller numbers of Rwandan students are in India, France, DRC, Uganda, and South Africa.

Inbound: 9,000 students in 2024, up from 1,400 in 2017.

Rwanda is one of the most interesting countries in Africa – in general, but also in terms of education. Increasing the enrolment rate at all school levels, improving quality, moving towards sustainability, and digitisation have been goals of the government for years. President Paul Kagame, who has been in power since 2000, has had a longtime aim of making Rwanda a knowledge economy and an education hub in Africa. Since 2017, the country has moved from attracting 1,400 international students to .

The government has articulated key goals in its to improve the access, quality, and relevance of education. That plan intends to transform Rwanda from a “predominantly agrarian-based, low-income economy to an industrial upper middle-income nation by 2035.”

The strategy prioritises improvements in the secondary system (especially literacy and numeracy) and vocational training sector (TVET). At the higher education level, it pinpoints STEM fields, manufacturing, construction, health, and education. Across all levels, there is an emphasis on digital delivery models and digital competency.

Challenges in the country’s higher education system include a lack of qualified teachers, a lack of instructors with advanced degrees – affecting the ability of the country to conduct and collaborate internationally on research – and weak links with priority industries and employers. In addition, more than half of higher education institutions are private and not all of them are delivering high quality or relevant education. Private institutions have helped to increase capacity and access, but the government rightly states in its strategy that this is not enough to help the country meet its development goals.

Goal: To become “the Singapore of Africa”

Despite its challenges, Rwanda’s higher education system has improved steadily and on par with the country’s aspirations to be “the Singapore of Africa”– i.e., a regional education hub. The aim for the system is to be relevant to local and regional needs yet also globally connected and competitive – and students from other African countries are clearly impressed. Speaking with the Somalian student Rahma Ahmed, an IT and entrepreneurship student at (founded according to an international partnership) said:

“I was thrilled the moment I got an opportunity to come to Rwanda. Because the other international students shared interesting study experiences, the hospitality of the students was also good, and diversity of the nationalities in the institutions was a bonus among others. And then there’s the money issue. Higher education in Rwanda has long been a lot cheaper than it is in most regions that I have checked out. In fact, almost free, for international students and nationals alike.”

Drice Michaella Ingabire, a Burundian former student at (a high school, and again a Rwanda-foreign country collaboration), said:

“Rwanda is a country that gives everyone an equal chance. That includes the children of farmers from the remotest corners of low-income countries, who couldn’t possibly think of studying at IVY League universities.”

Open to foreign agreements

The government is open to international collaborations to help it achieve its regional hub ambitions. For example, to address Rwanda’s shortage of qualified teachers, INTO and the British Council joined forces with local providers to deliver a . Students took digital tablets home throughout the course to receive the training virtually.

INTO’s Mike Riley said the project was hugely successful and that Rwandan trainer graduates now pass on their learning to Rwandan teachers.

“It has been inspiring working with teachers across the whole of Rwanda and supporting efforts to achieve a sustainable change in the Rwandan education system. We wish the local English teachers the very best as they deliver ongoing training to local secondary teachers in Rwanda, who we know are excited to put their new skills into practice.”

INTO and the British Council have been involved in training thousands of Rwandan teachers in English in the past few years through various partnerships, including with the Mastercard Foundation.

Countries with universities currently working in higher education partnerships with Rwanda include (click on the hyperlinks to read about them):

  • Belgium
  • And many more.

In all these cases, the goal is to forge mutually beneficial arrangements that meet Rwanda’s labour market and research needs, and to have more PhD graduates in the country (see this . The Rwandan government is interested in educational exchanges more than pure outbound mobility, as explained by Dr Robert Ibo Hinson in

In short, Rwanda is following the “smart internationalisation” pathway coined by Professor Damtew Tefera and advocated in Tibelius Amutuhaire’s Internationalization and Student Mobility: Exploring the Mobility of Higher Education Students in East Africa, which we covered last week on Ϲ Monitor. Professor Tefera argues that traditional concepts of internationalisation are Eurocentric/Western and do not benefit the Global South because they are not relevant to the economic and cultural contexts in Africa. He proposes that “smart internationalisation strategies make the process locally focused, though with an international flavour.”

Rwanda offers a fascinating example of the future of internationalisation – more balance between inbound and outbound, and heavily geared towards the needs of the sending country.

For additional background, please see:

The post Rwanda: A prime example of “smart internationalisation” appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
Continued growth reported for UK transnational education enrolments /2024/12/continued-growth-reported-for-uk-transnational-education-enrolments/ Wed, 11 Dec 2024 12:45:32 +0000 /?p=44743 Almost as many international students are studying for a UK degree outside of the UK as in it. In 2022/23, 606,485 students across 228 countries took part in some form of transnational education (TNE) delivered by one of 173 UK universities. This may even be an understatement due to a difference in reporting methodology in…

The post Continued growth reported for UK transnational education enrolments appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>
Almost as many international students are studying for a UK degree outside of the UK as in it. In 2022/23, 606,485 students across 228 countries took part in some form of transnational education (TNE) delivered by one of 173 UK universities. This may even be an understatement in 2022/23 versus previous years.

Meanwhile, there were 758,855 international students studying at higher education institutions in the UK in 2022/23. The onshore number remained higher that year, but maybe not for long. In part because of tighter immigration settings, visa issuances have been trending down this year and the in-country total is therefore likely to be lower the next time enrolments are tallied. By contrast, UK TNE is almost certainly destined to grow after a healthy 8.8% increase last year in the number of students enrolled in degrees delivered online, in-country, or through partnerships abroad.

Offshore/online delivery has several benefits for international students, including that it is less expensive than travelling for in-campus study in the UK, and that because many elite UK universities participate in TNE, students can access the prestige they want from a higher education degree while remaining in their own region.

Regional breakdown

The dominant region for UK TNE is Asia, which is responsible for half (51.5%) of all enrolments (312,295). Europe is next with 110,750, followed by the Middle East (82,930) Africa (64,790), and North America (29,455). There are also about 3,500 students in South America and 2,930 in Australasia.

The top five markets for UK TNE providers are China, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Singapore, and Egypt, accounting for a collective 40% of all UK higher education TNE activity. Sri Lanka displaced Malaysia in second place in 2022/23 with 18% y-o-y growth. Malaysia was the only country in the top five to report a decline.

Outside of the top five, the UAE is the fastest-growing TNE market, posting 20.4% year-over-year growth in 2022/23.

Move toward partnerships

There are several categories of TNE, including branch campuses, distance/online learning, joint/dual degrees, and faculty exchanges. But going into 2025, there is a trend emerging: governments open to UK TNE are more interested in internationalising their higher education systems through partnerships than in sending their own students to UK branch campuses.

As reported in , at a British Council “Deep Dialogues” session at the November 2024 Manchester Conference – hosted by the UK’s (QAA) for Higher Education and the consultancy Education Insight – university and government attendees from 19 countries were asked about the purpose of TNE in their nation. Here are the top five answers, in order:

  • “Internationalisation of domestic higher education system”
  • “Enhancing the quality of the higher education system”
  • “Widening access to higher education”
  • “Increasing diversity in higher education”
  • “Attracting international talent”

Professor Vangelis Tsiligkiris, founder of the TNE (international) Hub based at Nottingham Trent University in the UK, told University World News:

“The top four answers show why we need to talk about equitable partnerships and the need for host countries to gain something from TNE partnerships. That’s not always clear to the exporting institutions and it should be embedded, but isn’t always, into collaboration.”

Still, partnerships are on the rise. In 2022/23, UK TNE programmes delivered via overseas partner organisations enrolled 155,025 international students, compared with 138,090 in 2021/22. And in 2022/23, TNE provided by “other arrangement including collaborative provision” enrolled 252,405, compared with 225,675 the previous year.

TNE student numbers by type of provision, 2022/23. Branch campuses are the smallest segment of UK TNE, while distance/online and programmes delivered via an overseas partner are he largest. Source: Universities UK/HESA

For additional background, please see:

The post Continued growth reported for UK transnational education enrolments appeared first on Ϲ Monitor - Market intelligence for international student recruitment.

]]>