On the way to UK!
Take a look at a map of the UK on a world scale. It is small. In fact England occupies only twice the area of Sri Lanka. So, how is it that a country of this size once controlled a world empire? The answer is simple. The nature and quality of its education system has always meant that it punches well above its weight on the international scene.
Britain and Sri Lanka share much in common, which means that anyone who chooses UK as a study destination will feel at home. As of 2008/9 there were over 2.27 million undergraduate and postgraduate students in full-time study at a total of 164 institutions. Of these, approximately 91,000 were EU students and over 213,000 were international students. Each year approximately 10,000 Sri Lankan students travel abroad to study. Over one third of these make UK their preferred choice
This section will introduce you to Destination UK. If you have any specific questions, please click here ehsan@ancedu.com
Britain and Sri Lanka share much in common, which means that anyone who chooses UK as a study destination will feel at home. As of 2008/9 there were over 2.27 million undergraduate and postgraduate students in full-time study at a total of 164 institutions. Of these, approximately 91,000 were EU students and over 213,000 were international students. Each year approximately 10,000 Sri Lankan students travel abroad to study. Over one third of these make UK their preferred choice
This section will introduce you to Destination UK. If you have any specific questions, please click here ehsan@ancedu.com
Britain is the cradle of opportunities. It was the place where the industrial revolution started. It was the place where some of the first computers were constructed. It is a land of tradition and for all of this, it is in the British way not to be openly boastful. Did you know that over 98% of all mobile phones which were sold worldwide in 2007 contained at least one ARM processor. ARM is a company which is based in Cambridge. There are some very well known inventors, like James Dyson, Tim Berners-Lee and entrepreneurs, like Richard Branson, but for each of these there are
many, many more (like Edgar Codd, the inventor of the relational database) who just get on with being British.
In the days of Empire Britain developed an efficient system of education which produced excellent engineers, entrepreneurs and administrators who operated world-wide. Sri Lanka adopted this system and retained it after independence. There is no better place to capitalise on your education than UK
In the days of Empire Britain developed an efficient system of education which produced excellent engineers, entrepreneurs and administrators who operated world-wide. Sri Lanka adopted this system and retained it after independence. There is no better place to capitalise on your education than UK
