A successful education system must focus on the establishment of an education system that serves the needs of students by equipping them with the knowledge and skills demanded in today’s and tomorrow’s technologically advanced and globally interconnected markets. In order to achieve this purpose, it is imperative that this education system be nothing short of a Global Education System. A Global Education System consisting of a single Main Campus (located, preferably but not necessarily in the home country) to serve as the education and administrative hub of the entire system; Branch Campuses (located in highly populated cities around the globe); and Seminars & Workshops Programs, and Corporate Training Programs (mobile in locations to create affinity and recruitment opportunities).
Through this Global Education System students are afforded the ability to enroll and attend classes in their own respective home countries (providing the familiarity and comforts of home as they embark on adulthood), while assuring that their credentials will be recognized in any number of other countries where they may later seek employment. Moreover, students who desire to attend school overseas are assured that their credentials will be readily recognized when they return home to make use of them. Further, through the Global Education System, students are afforded the ability to transfer from one location to another (e.g., initially enrolls and attends classes at the Athens, Greece campus for two semesters, transfers to the campus in Sydney, Australia for another two semesters, followed by two semesters in London, England, and finally two semesters in Lima, Peru) while completing their degree programs, without concern over the transfer of earned credit hours from one school to another.*
Through ALEC’s Global Education System solution you are able to establish and maintain an educational system that is second to none, meets the needs of today’s and tomorrow’s students, and is both affordable and sustainable long-term, while being extremely profitable for you.
* Under the existing higher education scheme, students transferring from one school to another have some or all of their previously earned credits rejected by the new school 67 percent of the time. (National Center for Education
Statistics)