UK to introduce mandatory English test for migrant graduates

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Young men walk past Coventry University Library as they leave a campus building at the beginning of the new academic year, at Coventry University, in Coventry, central England on September 23, 2020. - Poring over her books in the library at Coventry University, far from her home in Equatorial Guinea, Agnes Genoveva Cheba Ade is determined to keep up her studies despite coronavirus restrictions. She admits that it has not been easy being abroad during a pandemic, with many courses moved online and socialising restricted -- many other overseas students have been put off entirely. But, like others in Britain, Coventry University in central England is confident it will weather the storm of Covid-19 and maintain its foreign students, who are a crucial source of income. (Photo by OLI SCARFF / AFP)

Migrant graduates who go to the UK through the Graduate Route will soon need to take mandatory English tests every year.

 

This change is part of a new government plan to make sure only the best and brightest stay in the UK.

The Cabinet is set to approve these new rules for the scheme, which now allows foreign students to work in the UK for two years after they graduate.

 

The new policy will also affect universities and colleges with high dropout rates. These institutions will lose the ability to recruit international students.

 

Additionally, the Home Office will target recruiting agents who mislead foreign students into leaving their degrees for low-paying jobs, often below minimum wage.

 

Government sources say the revised Graduate Route scheme is part of a larger effort to tighten immigration rules.

 

This move comes after news that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak plans to stop British universities from offering low-quality postgraduate courses to foreign students.

 

There is concern that these courses are being used as a way to enter the UK.

 

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