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Education Global · Encyclopedia
Education global is the vertical that follows people across the cycle — international schools for the children of mobile professionals, undergraduate study abroad as a coming-of-age and visa-pathway combined, MBA and graduate programs as credential-and-network purchases, executive education and certification as ongoing professional infrastructure, language schools as both standalone product and prerequisite for everything else. The market sits at roughly USD 7 trillion globally if you count K-12 plus tertiary plus corporate training, with the cross-border component growing faster than the domestic component in every major economy. UNESCO's 2024 Global Education Monitoring Report counted 6.4 million internationally mobile tertiary students, up from 2 million in 2000, with India and China contributing roughly 40% of all mobility flows.\n\nThe international-schools layer follows expat workforces and aspirational local middle classes. International Baccalaureate Organisation tracks 5,700+ authorised IB World Schools across 160 countries; the Council of International Schools accredits a parallel network; Cambridge Assessment International Education's IGCSE plus A-Level pathway runs through 10,000+ schools in 160 countries. The big chains — Nord Anglia, GEMS, Cognita, Inspired, Dulwich College International — operate hundreds of campuses that mirror their flagship-city brands across Asia, the Middle East, and increasingly Africa. Tuition runs USD 15,000 to USD 50,000 per year per child at the top tier; this is the line where most expat-package negotiations actually break down or hold together.\n\nUndergraduate study abroad is structured by visa regime as much as by academic prestige. The US still leads on enrollment (1.06 million international students in 2023-24 per Open Doors) but the F-1 pathway has narrowed; the UK's post-study work visa (the Graduate Route, 2021) reopened that market briefly before the 2024-25 immigration tightening; Canada's post-graduation work permit cap and the Australia-NZ Skilled Migrant pathways structure their flows. Continental Europe is the underrated story — Germany, the Netherlands, France, and Italy collectively enroll over 1 million international students at tuition fees an order of magnitude below US private universities, with English-language taught programs proliferating since the Bologna Process aligned credential frameworks across the EHEA's 49 signatory countries.\n\nMBA and graduate programs are a credential market with stark price segmentation. The top-10 MBA programs (HBS, Stanford, Wharton, INSEAD, LBS, Booth, Kellogg, Sloan, Columbia, Yale-equiv) charge USD 150,000+ in tuition alone; the value proposition is the network and the placement statistics, not the curriculum. The next tier of "tier-1 by region" schools (IIM Ahmedabad-Bangalore-Calcutta, INSEAD Asia, NUS Business, HKUST, IESE, IMD, Rotterdam, Mannheim, ISB Hyderabad) compete for the same pool with sharper geographic positioning. Online MBAs from accredited universities (Illinois Gies, IU Kelley Direct, Imperial College Online, Warwick Distance) have legitimised the digital pathway but compress earning premia. Speciality master's programs in finance, analytics, AI, and management consulting are the fastest-growing segment per the GMAC Application Trends survey.\n\nExecutive education and ongoing certification are where AJG's academy and cert root verticals connect. The MOOC platforms (Coursera, edX, FutureLearn, Khan Academy, Udemy Business, LinkedIn Learning) deliver university-affiliated and standalone content to ~250 million registered learners worldwide. The professional certifications (PMP, CFA, FRM, CISSP, AWS, Azure, GCP, Six Sigma) are the substrate of mid-career mobility. Language schools — DELF/DALF for French, Goethe-Zertifikat for German, JLPT for Japanese, HSK for Mandarin, IELTS/TOEFL for English — are the gateway test that every other cross-border education and visa decision depends on.\n\nAJG treats education-global as both a content surface (the 162 tier-1 topics include academy-* and cert-* and acadx-* and journal-* and mooc-* roots) and as a service-design problem. The decision tree for "should I send my child to study abroad" is not a single answer; it is a cascade of visa, currency, certification recognition, employment-pathway, and family-relocation questions that the platform models as a graph, not a list.
Encyclopedia lens on Education Global — cross-referenced view pulling all entity types from the unified knowledge graph.
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