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Website. www.ufsc.br. The Federal University of Santa Catarina (Portuguese: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, UFSC) is a public university in Florianópolis, the capital city of Santa Catarina in southern Brazil. Considered one of the leading universities in Brazil, UFSC is the 6th best university in Latin America in the ranking of Times ...
Brazil's largest newspaper Folha de S. Paulo organizes, since 2012, a national ranking of universities [1] with criteria akin to those used by the better known worldwide rankings: research, teaching, internationalization, innovation and market value.
Universities and higher education in Brazil. Brazil adopts a mixed system of public and privately funded universities. Public universities can be federally funded or financed by State governments (such as USP, Unicamp and Unesp in the State of São Paulo). Private schools can be for-profit or, in the case of Catholic universities, not-for-profit.
This is a list of universities in Brazil, divided by states. Across the country there are more than 2,368 Brazilian universities and colleges (public and private) recognized by the MEC (Ministry of Education).
The Insper Institute of Education and Research (also known only as Insper) is a private university located in the Vila Olympia district close to the new business centre of São Paulo, Brazil. The university offers higher education courses on fields of Business Administration, Economics, Engineering, Law and Computer Science.
www.earj.com.br. Escola Americana do Rio de Janeiro (EARJ, the American School of Rio de Janeiro) is a non-profit twin-campus IB World Continuum school located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The school was founded in 1937 as a private, independent, coeducational, non-denominational day school. EARJ offers an educational program from Nursery through ...
Education in Brazil has had many changes. It first began with Jesuit missions, [ 2 ] that controlled education for a long time. Then, two hundred years after their arrival, their powers were limited by the Marquis of Pombal. [ 2 ] Shortly after the Jesuits' power was limited, the Brazilian government took over education and it is now run by the ...
COPPEAD is the only business school both associated with a Brazilian public university and with an international accreditation. [2] The Master of Business Administration (MBA) program, public and tuition-free, is the only one in Latin America ranked in 2014 among the world's top 100, according to the Financial Times Global MBA Ranking. [3]