Zürcher Nachrichten - English-language students swerve UK post Brexit

EUR -
AED 4.263418
AFN 80.102537
ALL 97.805681
AMD 445.92619
ANG 2.077667
AOA 1064.548062
ARS 1462.724764
AUD 1.78108
AWG 2.089625
AZN 1.970327
BAM 1.944607
BBD 2.345598
BDT 141.147534
BGN 1.956957
BHD 0.437671
BIF 3296.963587
BMD 1.160903
BND 1.488333
BOB 8.027791
BRL 6.449741
BSD 1.161713
BTN 99.666306
BWP 15.621083
BYN 3.801816
BYR 22753.692361
BZD 2.333468
CAD 1.592468
CDF 3350.365078
CHF 0.930493
CLF 0.029264
CLP 1122.987363
CNY 8.327139
CNH 8.339333
COP 4684.822731
CRC 585.927315
CUC 1.160903
CUP 30.763921
CVE 110.924556
CZK 24.670688
DJF 206.315482
DKK 7.464557
DOP 69.985049
DZD 151.058119
EGP 57.359856
ERN 17.41354
ETB 158.521228
FJD 2.646274
FKP 0.864129
GBP 0.866857
GEL 3.145847
GGP 0.864129
GHS 12.072602
GIP 0.864129
GMD 83.004803
GNF 10048.773236
GTQ 8.91568
GYD 242.949454
HKD 9.112744
HNL 30.589896
HRK 7.535649
HTG 152.532003
HUF 400.499527
IDR 18889.743909
ILS 3.905579
IMP 0.864129
INR 99.830142
IQD 1520.7825
IRR 48903.025148
ISK 142.419701
JEP 0.864129
JMD 185.651363
JOD 0.823043
JPY 172.712714
KES 150.339252
KGS 101.516991
KHR 4666.828971
KMF 492.948309
KPW 1044.839818
KRW 1610.334071
KWD 0.355118
KYD 0.968127
KZT 610.98309
LAK 25034.866299
LBP 103958.834524
LKR 349.756748
LRD 233.341266
LSL 20.814798
LTL 3.427844
LVL 0.702218
LYD 6.280324
MAD 10.519518
MDL 19.63299
MGA 5142.798473
MKD 61.604186
MMK 2437.527181
MNT 4161.658823
MOP 9.393231
MRU 46.110683
MUR 52.751702
MVR 17.871696
MWK 2015.92058
MXN 21.834054
MYR 4.939678
MZN 74.250898
NAD 20.815169
NGN 1775.66964
NIO 42.663115
NOK 11.895108
NPR 159.466089
NZD 1.948951
OMR 0.446358
PAB 1.161713
PEN 4.134022
PGK 4.798301
PHP 65.979972
PKR 330.451204
PLN 4.264226
PYG 8995.222163
QAR 4.226384
RON 5.07837
RSD 117.150452
RUB 90.639837
RWF 1667.636688
SAR 4.354117
SBD 9.658199
SCR 16.891204
SDG 697.121269
SEK 11.283068
SGD 1.491731
SHP 0.912287
SLE 26.062511
SLL 24343.553151
SOS 663.454797
SRD 43.492635
STD 24028.341446
SVC 10.164492
SYP 15093.882638
SZL 20.814972
THB 37.822193
TJS 11.105873
TMT 4.074768
TND 3.367202
TOP 2.718952
TRY 46.735626
TTD 7.886604
TWD 34.134141
TZS 3032.862341
UAH 48.579867
UGX 4164.031217
USD 1.160903
UYU 47.347461
UZS 14853.749195
VES 134.316236
VND 30343.093576
VUV 138.731534
WST 3.18577
XAF 652.202823
XAG 0.030725
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.137398
XDR 0.811419
XOF 652.427167
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.183787
ZAR 20.804902
ZMK 10449.515398
ZMW 26.515374
ZWL 373.810187
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

English-language students swerve UK post Brexit
English-language students swerve UK post Brexit / Photo: Andy Buchanan - AFP

English-language students swerve UK post Brexit

At the top of Calton Hill overlooking Edinburgh and the North Sea, a visiting English language student from France is in no doubt about the view: "Amazing!" he exclaims.

Text size:

Covid has meant that the number of foreign students on such visits to the UK has fallen sharply.

But Britain's departure from the European Union is not helping the recovery, as post-Brexit administrative requirements have raised travel costs.

About 50 college students from France's Alsace region have taken advantage of the lifting of UK Covid restrictions. Others, however, have opted to learn English in EU nations such as Ireland or Malta -- or simply sign up for language courses at home.

Teacher Sarah Lepioufle, accompanying her college's Edinburgh trip, said the changes introduced since Brexit -- the extra paperwork involved -- had made applying for courses an "obstacle course".

Non-EU students living in France are suddenly facing visa costs of £100 (118 euros, $126), whereas before Brexit they could travel on a collective travel document.

"I had to give up because I am Russian," said Elisabeth Shpak, left out of the Scotland trip because of the fees involved.

- Major financial losses -

The British Educational Travel Association, whose members help organise such visits, estimates that Brexit could cost the sector up to £3 billion annually.

Having spoken to stakeholders in the sector, they felt voyages would be 60 to 70 percent down compared to before Brexit and the pandemic, said Steve Lowy at BETA.

Before Britain's EU exit, Britain welcomed "well over one million" such students per year, he said.

Now "there is a perception of us not being welcoming, and not open to people from Europe. And that is a harder thing to overcome".

While a BETA poll showed Britons favoured relaxing the post-Brexit travel rules, Lowy argued that overcoming the new negative perception was "potentially a long-term issue".

For those students who have managed to travel to Scotland, the experience is celebrated, especially coming out of Covid restrictions.

"There have been no trips, everything has been cancelled because of lockdowns," said 13-year-old Aaron Schaetzel.

- Collective travel -

The UK authorities say they can already offer students a so-called "collective passport".

But this document -- the product of a 1961 European treaty -- has not been signed by all current EU members.

As for the French travel sector, it is waiting on its own government's guidance regarding use of the collective passport for the first time.

The UK government, meanwhile, cites security risks for some students now needing individual visas, something Lowy finds hard to accept.

"Youth travel is low risk," he insisted.

"These students and their teachers are here for cultural and educational purposes, and that is only good for the UK -- not just the initial revenue they bring but for the long-term impact."

On Calton Hill, tour guide Marilyn Hunter passionately tells the French students about Scotland's landscape, its history and major exports whisky and salmon.

But Brexit seems to have spoiled the opportunity for some EU-based students to visit the UK.

The previous week, a group visiting from Germany had been forced to leave behind four students who had not obtained their visas in time.

E.Leuenberger--NZN