Adelaide is becoming a hub for higher education.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The Internet will save higher education, but it may kill your alma mater.
I'd like to see the University of Western Australia and the other four or five universities in Western Australia really excel through having some of the greatest minds in the world attracted to it.
Our higher education system is one of the things that makes America exceptional. There's no place else that has the assets we do when it comes to higher education. People from all over the world aspire to come here and study here. And that is a good thing.
College graduates work in every sector of the American economy, and the research engines incubated within our universities generate a wealth of ideas and innovations that have an enormous impact on our lives.
Adelaide's charms are compelling. It's not a huge place; the size is manageable, the traffic absurdly light.
Higher education is confronting challenges, like the economy is, about the need for a higher number of more adequately trained, more highly educated citizenry.
I'd always dreamt of acting but, in Adelaide, we don't have exposure to the opportunities that make stardom a possibility.
Ever since economists revealed how much universities contribute to economic growth, politicians have paid close attention to higher education.
We know that a college degree is rapidly becoming the price of admission to the global economy.
I had seen Adelaide the dearest and the cheapest place to live in.