Ministry: Multiple options for Jordanian students returning from Ukraine
The Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research stated that it has been monitoring the situation of Jordanian students at Ukrainian universities since the outbreak of the conflict in Ukraine in coordination and cooperation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriate Affairs.
Mohannad Al-Khatib, the ministry's media spokesman, said in a statement to the media on Saturday that the ministry had launched an electronic platform for these students to register their academic information, noting that there are about 400 registered students on the platform, the vast majority of whom study medicine and dentistry.
According to the ministry, lists of these students, including their majors and the universities in Ukraine where they study, have been sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which will then contact the relevant Ukrainian authorities to obtain documents proving they were students at these institutions.
He said that the Non-Jordanian Certificate Equivalency Committee of the Ministry of Higher Education exempted these students from having to finish 50 percent of the curriculum at their home universities before continuing their education in the Kingdom.
Jordanian students returning from Ukrainian institutions have the option of continuing their education via e-learning as long as their Ukrainian universities allow it, according to the ministry. Hungary and Russia, for example, have talked about the possibility of taking in Ukrainian university students and letting them finish where they left off.
In terms of permitting these students to continue their education in Jordanian universities, the ministry stated that this option is open to them and encouraged them to visit the universities where they choose to continue their studies. Admission to local universities, however, will be subject to the regulations and requirements in place at these institutions, according to the ministry.
The Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research stated that it has been monitoring the situation of Jordanian students at Ukrainian universities since the outbreak of the conflict in Ukraine in coordination and cooperation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriate Affairs.
Mohannad Al-Khatib, the ministry's media spokesman, said in a statement to the media on Saturday that the ministry had launched an electronic platform for these students to register their academic information, noting that there are about 400 registered students on the platform, the vast majority of whom study medicine and dentistry.
According to the ministry, lists of these students, including their majors and the universities in Ukraine where they study, have been sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which will then contact the relevant Ukrainian authorities to obtain documents proving they were students at these institutions.
He said that the Non-Jordanian Certificate Equivalency Committee of the Ministry of Higher Education exempted these students from having to finish 50 percent of the curriculum at their home universities before continuing their education in the Kingdom.
Jordanian students returning from Ukrainian institutions have the option of continuing their education via e-learning as long as their Ukrainian universities allow it, according to the ministry. Hungary and Russia, for example, have talked about the possibility of taking in Ukrainian university students and letting them finish where they left off.
In terms of permitting these students to continue their education in Jordanian universities, the ministry stated that this option is open to them and encouraged them to visit the universities where they choose to continue their studies. Admission to local universities, however, will be subject to the regulations and requirements in place at these institutions, according to the ministry.
The Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research stated that it has been monitoring the situation of Jordanian students at Ukrainian universities since the outbreak of the conflict in Ukraine in coordination and cooperation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriate Affairs.
Mohannad Al-Khatib, the ministry's media spokesman, said in a statement to the media on Saturday that the ministry had launched an electronic platform for these students to register their academic information, noting that there are about 400 registered students on the platform, the vast majority of whom study medicine and dentistry.
According to the ministry, lists of these students, including their majors and the universities in Ukraine where they study, have been sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which will then contact the relevant Ukrainian authorities to obtain documents proving they were students at these institutions.
He said that the Non-Jordanian Certificate Equivalency Committee of the Ministry of Higher Education exempted these students from having to finish 50 percent of the curriculum at their home universities before continuing their education in the Kingdom.
Jordanian students returning from Ukrainian institutions have the option of continuing their education via e-learning as long as their Ukrainian universities allow it, according to the ministry. Hungary and Russia, for example, have talked about the possibility of taking in Ukrainian university students and letting them finish where they left off.
In terms of permitting these students to continue their education in Jordanian universities, the ministry stated that this option is open to them and encouraged them to visit the universities where they choose to continue their studies. Admission to local universities, however, will be subject to the regulations and requirements in place at these institutions, according to the ministry.
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Ministry: Multiple options for Jordanian students returning from Ukraine
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