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Something is "educational" if it teaches--it could be on any topic. An "education program" would be something specifically regarding education. Your example is an education program since it is about the logistics of funding education.
educational means something that provides that knowledge (education). "highly educated" means someone who has studied up to a high level. "highly educational" means something that provides a high level / a lot of of knowledge.
In the U.S. and Canada, at least, the highest ranked graduate was traditionally granted the honor of giving the valediction (i.e. farewell address) at the commencement exercises, and thus the student with the highest grade point (or whatever other mechanism is used to rank the students) became known as the valedictorian.
And there are fifth-year seniors in 5-year programs (e.g. BArch, BFA) and even fourth-year juniors, in the case of redshirting juniors. – choster Commented Nov 14, 2016 at 21:22
EDIT: According to a dictionary the phrase with "fits" makes more sense. I use this phrase for a educational programme. Nonetheless, the phrase "The programme perfectly meets my needs" should be a formal one, which I have chosen now.
A person who attends the same college or university as you, from a more technical perspective, should probably be called your collegemate (college is more or less a general term for an institution of higher education, at least, in North America) rather than your schoolmate, but I wouldn't say that this term is common enough that you will ever hear someone actually say it in real life.
@LEHANH To repeat, "got" is not slang. It is not confined to a particular group or age-group; nor is it a coinage; nor is it subject to growing stale and dated as slang is. It is a cross-dialect, cross-generation verb used mainly in informal contexts, though that is no doubt the result of the educational system.
Short excursions for education or for observations of natural phenomena are called field trips. One-day educational field studies are often made by classes as extracurricular exercises, e.g. to visit a natural or geographical feature. The term is also used for short military movements into foreign territory, without a formal announcement of war
FROM THE BOOK "Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs" assist someone in something - to help a particular person working on a task.
According to Longman, I think I can use "aimed at ing" and "aiming to v" both. GRAMMAR: Patterns with aim • You aim to do something: I aim to study medicine. Don’t say: I aim at