Secondo uno studio, otto laureati su dieci dell’Europa orientale intendono restare in Polonia

    https://www.polskieradio.pl/395/7786/Artykul/3459983,eight-in-10-eastern-european-graduates-plan-to-stay-in-poland-study-finds

    di dat_9600gt_user

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    13 commenti

    1. OkKnowledge2064 on

      thats pretty damn good. I would guess in Germany its less or maybe equal to that

    2. Next_Yesterday_1695 on

      >  60,000 students from Ukraine and Belarus are currently enrolled in Polish universities, medical schools and technical colleges.

      There’s zero reasons for a Ukrainian graduate to go back, it’s a one-way ticket.

    3. And of course the only thing the comments are about is if Poland is Eastern Europe. Even when it isn’t about polish students.

      The polish trauma of being called eastern Europe will never not be funny.

    4. Leading_Stick_5918 on

      In all seriousness, as a Swede, Poland is starting to look like a nice place to move to.

    5. How about do this again after the ‘peace’ in the east is settled?

    6. dat_9600gt_user on

      >**More than 80 percent of Eastern European graduates from Polish universities plan to live and work in Poland, according to a new report.**

      >The study, entitled “Students from the East on the Polish Labour Market,” reveals that 60,000 students from Ukraine and Belarus are currently enrolled in Polish universities, medical schools and technical colleges.

      >Economics is the most popular field of study, followed by linguistics, law and international relations.

      >The report, compiled by the University of Warsaw and the EWL Foundation, says that over half of Eastern European graduates secure employment as highly skilled specialists or managers.

      >Alex Kartsel from the EWL Foundation for Supporting Migrants on the Labour Market has told public broadcaster Polish Radio’s IAR news agency that many of these graduates hold a competitive edge in the job market thanks to their strong language skills.

      >In addition to their native language, they typically have a high level of proficiency in Russian, Polish and English, Kartsel said.

      >(mk/gs)

    7. This is tangent but… I’m surprised there isn’t a little more contest between european countries to attract foreign (especially other european) university students.

      It has always been one of the very best sources of migration. Lots of other benefits regardless of migration results.

    8. davidov92 on

      If I could speak Polish, I’d consider moving to Poland too. As it stands, I’ll just stay a tourist.

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