Germany Is Now Offering Free Tuition To All Canadian Students

Authored by studyandgoabroad.com and submitted by imstayinalive
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Traditionally in North America, many students plan some kind of trip or vacation after their graduation as a way to blow off steam before heading out into the “real world”.

But why wait until you’re done with school? You can just as easily explore the world while you’re completing you studies. You just have to go study in another country.

More specifically, you can study in Germany.

And you don’t need to speak German do it!

Many courses in German Universities are actually offered in English, and international students don’t even have to meet the German language requirements to apply. Best of all, tuition is FREE!

In Germany undergraduate students don’t pay any tuition fees in all the public universities since October 2014.

“From October and on, every federation is required to abolish tuition fees and offer free higher education to native and international students alike” – Source

So if you ever needed an excuse to study abroad, this is it!

Curious about the programs offered in 2017? You can find a list of them right here.

If you want more information about studying in Germany in English, there is a very detailed guide posted right here.

And if you’re serious about this. Click here to apply for a German study Visa.

woopdada on May 29th, 2019 at 08:52 UTC »

That is true in general, but it's honestly really not that many courses that are in English. And it's only in some fields. At least at the Bachelor level. There are much more English ones at a Master level.

seductus on May 29th, 2019 at 06:43 UTC »

I’m an American and was contracted into a large German office for 9 months. Some of the executives (perhaps contracted) were Americans and English as it was a large international company. I never learned German and most of the others didn’t learn decent German either.

Yet once a week, if so showed up at work early, I’d see employees in an English class. They were required to be at a certain level of English. Even if they were a computer programmer or accountant or some other back office function that would never talk to customers. I felt a bit bad for them as I and the other English speakers should have been the ones stuck into a training room.

I miss that place a bit. Fantastic country and people. I’ve lived in 6 countries and so can compare against a few others.

YtPlanetC on May 29th, 2019 at 05:25 UTC »

This applies in a lot of European countries, I thought it was normal?