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London ranked top city for students

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London has been ranked as the best city in the world for university students.

The top 30 rankings for student cities, produced by the QS higher education data analysts, has previously put Montreal and Paris in first place.

The ratings are based on factors such as the number of top universities in a city, the local jobs market, the diversity of the culture and the quality of life.

But London ranked poorly on one of the measures - affordability.

The ranking of university cities, rather than the quality of institutions, is produced by the QS higher education group, which publishes the annual World University Rankings.

The comparisons, which include a survey of the views of 50,000 students, are an attempt to quantify some of the attractions and disadvantages of cities for students.


Culture capital

For students in London there is a higher concentration of world-class institutions than in any other city, including Imperial College, University College London, the London School of Economics and King's College.

Students also have access to the cultural life of museums, theatres, cinemas and restaurants.

It is also seen as a good place to connect with employers and get a job.

London achieved a high rating for being a very international city, with high levels of tolerance and diversity, so that overseas students would not feel isolated or excluded.

But when it comes to cost of living and affordability, London does badly, being seen as expensive and difficult for student budgets.

Ben Sowter, research director at QS, says the results show that London "remains a great place to study, despite eye-watering costs".


Tokyo's appeal

In second place is Tokyo in Japan, which does very well in terms of the "desirability" of the city. This measures factors such as safety, pollution and quality of living.

Across all cities, Toronto in Canada is rated highest for this desirability, ahead of Tokyo and Amsterdam.

Australia has been pushing for a growing slice of the international market in overseas students and Melbourne is ranked as the third best city for students and Sydney is ninth.

Both the Australian cities perform highly in being outward looking and allowing students to mix, with Canadian and New Zealand institutions scoring highly on this measure.

In the academic World University Rankings, US universities dominate, taking all four of the top places in a league table headed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


'Welcoming' cities

But there are no US cities in the top 10 student cities, compared with two in Germany, Berlin and Munich. And there are only two US cities in the top 30, Boston and New York.

Paris, which for several years was the top-rated city, has been ranked fifth.

In terms of the most affordable student cities, Budapest in Hungary is rated top, followed by Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.

A separate annual study, published this week by another part of the QS group, says the two top factors for overseas students were the perceived quality of teaching and whether university locations were seen as "welcoming".

The International Student Survey, based on 67,000 prospective applicants, also warns that 39% of EU students thought that Brexit "has made me less interested in studying in the UK".

They feared that Brexit would make UK universities more expensive and "less welcoming" to students from EU countries.


Student visas

London's success in the rankings is likely to raise the long-running debate about the UK's attitude towards overseas students and visa requirements.

A study earlier this year from the Higher Education Policy Institute found international students were worth £20bn per year to the UK economy.

London alone gains £4.6bn, said the analysis - with Sheffield the biggest beneficiary in proportion to the size of its local economy.

The think tank said the findings supported calls to remove international students from immigration targets.

The Home Office has argued that there is no limit on the numbers of legitimate students.

Best Student Cities 2018
  1. London
  2. Tokyo
  3. Melbourne
  4. Montreal
  5. Paris
  6. Munich
  7. Berlin
  8. Zurich
  9. Sydney
  10. Seoul
  11. Vienna
  12. Hong Kong
  13. Toronto
  14. Boston
  15. Singapore
  16. Edinburgh
  17. Vancouver
  18. New York
  19. Kyoto-Osaka-Kobe
  20. Taipei
  21. Brisbane
  22. Canberra
  23. Auckland
  24. Manchester
  25. Buenos Aires
  26. Beijing
  27. Amsterdam
  28. Moscow
  29. Shanghai
  30. Prague
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-44039666
 
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Not sure I agree with Toronto at #13 while Montreal sits at #4.
 
All well and good but if its unaffordable for some then it becomes an elites only option..
 
The recent spike in violent crime especially knife and acid attacks in London makes the city less appealing.
 
Not sure I agree with Toronto at #13 while Montreal sits at #4.

Maybe because you haven't been to Montreal as a student. Let me assure you it blows Toronto out of the water as a city to live in as a student.


Source: I went to school in Montreal
 
I'm more surprised that Monty dropped from one to four.
 
The ratings are based on factors such as the number of top universities in a city, the local jobs market, the diversity of the culture and the quality of life.
Students also have access to the cultural life of museums, theatres, cinemas and restaurants.

But London ranked poorly on one of the measures - affordability.
But when it comes to cost of living and affordability, London does badly, being seen as expensive and difficult for student budgets.
Surely 'the quality of life' and access to 'museums, theatres, cinemas and restaurants' has a lot to do with affordability and student budgets!

Having all these cultural facilities, but without the financial resources to partake in them, should be seen as a negative and not as a positive. Unless of course for the students concerned these cultural facilities are places where they can work as waiters and cleaners so as to be able to afford their high accommodation, transport and other living costs.
 
I am quite surprised to see Tokyo at number two. Considering their homogeneity and lack of ethnic and cultural diversity, I was under the impression that it must be an unwelcoming place for other nationals unless you are a tourist, since you will have to fully submerge in their culture to survive there.

There is also a famous Japanese proverb, something along the lines of: "the nail that sticks out is the one that gets hammered".
 
IIRC Paris used to be number 1 a few years back. Studies there during that time and it was one of the amazing cities to study in. London was fine, but having studied in both cities, Paris was clearly the better one.

Happy to see Munich up there. Lived there, and though its a bit quiet for working sorts, it seems an amazing city if you're a student. Though surprised to see that Berlin is below Munich. The only issue could be jobs after graduation, but Berlin has so much more going on, and is way cheaper. Should really be one of the best cities in the world for students.
 
Aren't incidents like stabbing and acid being thrown around becoming more and more common in London. I also heard that crime rate is pretty high too. Don't feel secure enough when thinking about London in comparison to other European cities.
 
Surely 'the quality of life' and access to 'museums, theatres, cinemas and restaurants' has a lot to do with affordability and student budgets!

Having all these cultural facilities, but without the financial resources to partake in them, should be seen as a negative and not as a positive. Unless of course for the students concerned these cultural facilities are places where they can work as waiters and cleaners so as to be able to afford their high accommodation, transport and other living costs.

Well spotted, the survey has little common sense, like saying London has 5-6 EPL teams so homeless people have greater choice of teams to watch when they can hardly afford to watch league 2 footy :)))
 
I am quite surprised to see Tokyo at number two. Considering their homogeneity and lack of ethnic and cultural diversity, I was under the impression that it must be an unwelcoming place for other nationals unless you are a tourist, since you will have to fully submerge in their culture to survive there.

There is also a famous Japanese proverb, something along the lines of: "the nail that sticks out is the one that gets hammered".

That’s true. Japan is not a good place for foreigners.Japanese people refuse to accept foreigners in their country and there are laws in place that make it difficult to get residency. They want to preserve their culture and way of life. It is a very homogenous country.
 
Aren't incidents like stabbing and acid being thrown around becoming more and more common in London. I also heard that crime rate is pretty high too. Don't feel secure enough when thinking about London in comparison to other European cities.

depends where you are, the posh areas near Kings College are always safe, in my own expereinces I never had an issue. Part of my commute was walking down the Mall to get to Victoria late at night. It's spooky becasue of how quite it can get, but the most danger you are in come's from bird droppings.
 
London is truly a world-class city, no doubt about that, however as somebody who went to Uni in the north of England and was constantly skint I do wonder how students afford to live down there. Every time I even visit London for a day or two, I come back with noticeably lighter pockets.
 
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