Admissions
The University of Oxford is the oldest university in the English-speaking world. It is ranked first in medical sciences and second overall in the Times Higher Education's list of the world's top universities for 2013-14, and is repeatedly ranked in the top ten of universities worldwide in the annual tables compiled by Shanghai Jiaotong University.
The community at University of Oxford is truly international. Students currently come from more than 140 countries around the world and study a wide range of subjects. They make up a third of the student body at Oxford, including 14 per cent of our full-time undergraduate students and 63 per cent of our full-time postgraduates. In 2014 there more than 900 Chinese students studying at Oxford and after the UK and the US, China provides the largest number of applicants to Oxford for postgraduate study. More than 2500 graduates of Oxford live in China today.
Find out what makes Oxford one of the best places to study in the world.
The University is keen to ensure that the brightest and best students apply to Oxford irrespective of their social background, from China and around the world. More than 850 fully-funded scholarships are available at Oxford for new Master’s and Doctoral students in 2015-16. A number of Chinese students hold prestigious Oxford scholarships, such as the Clarendon Scholarships and the Rhodes Scholarship; they also benefit from scholarships created specifically for Chinese students. A number of colleges also offer scholarships specifically targeted at Chinese undergraduate or postgraduate students. Applicants who apply by January each year are automatically considered for most scholarships.
Find out more about Oxford scholarships for international students here.
The University of Oxford is able to offer a unique range of education and training possibilities for executives and senior personnel from the fields of government, business, science, the creative industries and academia in the People's Republic of China and Hong Kong. Courses have been prepared by the Said Business School, the Blavatnik School of Government, the Oxford Martin School and the Department of Continuing Education, which runs the prestigious Advanced Leadership Development Programme. Training is offered in the fields of comparative public policy, global economic management, finance and innovation and global higher education. The University has delivered indivdually tailored training programmes for the Central Party School, SAFEA, the Chinese Executive Leadership Academy Pudong, China Construction Bank, the Bank of China (Hong Kong), as well as a number of provincial and municipal governments and universities in the People's Republic of China and Hong Kong.
Picture: Hong Kong Rhodes Scholars in the dining hall in Trinity College during the celebrations. Front row from left to right: Olivia Cheung (2012), Cherry Xu (2013), second row from left to right: Siron Ng (2008) and Tianyu Zhang (2007).
The community at University of Oxford is truly international. Students currently come from more than 140 countries around the world and study a wide range of subjects. They make up a third of the student body at Oxford, including 14 per cent of our full-time undergraduate students and 63 per cent of our full-time postgraduates. In 2014 there more than 900 Chinese students studying at Oxford and after the UK and the US, China provides the largest number of applicants to Oxford for postgraduate study. More than 2500 graduates of Oxford live in China today.
Find out what makes Oxford one of the best places to study in the world.
The University is keen to ensure that the brightest and best students apply to Oxford irrespective of their social background, from China and around the world. More than 850 fully-funded scholarships are available at Oxford for new Master’s and Doctoral students in 2015-16. A number of Chinese students hold prestigious Oxford scholarships, such as the Clarendon Scholarships and the Rhodes Scholarship; they also benefit from scholarships created specifically for Chinese students. A number of colleges also offer scholarships specifically targeted at Chinese undergraduate or postgraduate students. Applicants who apply by January each year are automatically considered for most scholarships.
Find out more about Oxford scholarships for international students here.
The University of Oxford is able to offer a unique range of education and training possibilities for executives and senior personnel from the fields of government, business, science, the creative industries and academia in the People's Republic of China and Hong Kong. Courses have been prepared by the Said Business School, the Blavatnik School of Government, the Oxford Martin School and the Department of Continuing Education, which runs the prestigious Advanced Leadership Development Programme. Training is offered in the fields of comparative public policy, global economic management, finance and innovation and global higher education. The University has delivered indivdually tailored training programmes for the Central Party School, SAFEA, the Chinese Executive Leadership Academy Pudong, China Construction Bank, the Bank of China (Hong Kong), as well as a number of provincial and municipal governments and universities in the People's Republic of China and Hong Kong.
Picture: Hong Kong Rhodes Scholars in the dining hall in Trinity College during the celebrations. Front row from left to right: Olivia Cheung (2012), Cherry Xu (2013), second row from left to right: Siron Ng (2008) and Tianyu Zhang (2007).