THE FOLLOWING ARE TOP 3 UNIVERSITIES
TOP 5 CHEAPEST UNIVERSITIES IN EUROPE
3. TU Dresden, Germany.
EU and international students pay the same tuition fees
of £457, and spend averagely £4,869
bb
on living cost, that is a total of £5,326
cost per year. The university is ranked number 155 in the Times Higher
Education World University ranking. The name Technische Universität Dresden has
only been used since 1961; the history of the university, however, goes back
nearly 200 years to 1828. This makes it one of the oldest colleges of
technology in Germany, and one of the country’s oldest universities, which in
German today refers to institutes of higher education that cover the entire
curriculum. The university is a member of TU9, a consortium of the nine
leading German Institutes of Technologybb
TOP 5 CHEAPEST UNIVERSITIES IN EUROPE
2. Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Italy.
This university charges zero tuition fees for all
undergraduate students regardless of nationality. The school takes care of the
students living cost as well as tuition fees. However, admission selected
process is highly competitive. Masters degree programme cost between €7,500 to
10,000. The university is ranked number 155 in the Times Higher Education World
University ranking. The present-day Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies is the
descendant of several institutions modelled on the Scuola Normale
Superiore di Pisa, also known in Italian as Scuola Normale (English: Normal
School), which is a higher learning institution in Pisa. It was founded in
1810, by Napoleonic decree, as a branch of the École
Normale
Supérieure of Paris.
APPLY HERE
THIS IS NUMBER ONE
1. Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Italy.
The university also offer zero Tuition fees, and takes
care of the students living cost as well as tuition fees. The university ranked
number 184 in the Times Higher Education World University Ranking.
FairFX also revealed the most expensive universities for
EU and non-EU students – and every single one of the top 10 was located in the
UK. The cheapest UK university was the University of East Anglia,
costing £16,279 per year.
It was founded in 1810 with a decree by Napoleon as
a branch of the École Normale Supérieure in Paris,[3] with
the aim of training the teachers of the Empire to educate its citizens
according to educational and methodological "norms".
Eminent personalities from the world of science,
literature and politics have studied at the Normale, among them Giosuè
Carducci, Carlo Rubbia, Enrico Fermi and Carlo Azeglio
Ciampi, as well as Alessio Figalli, in more recent times.