Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF

Recruiting in Ghana

Sub-Saharan Africa has become an increasingly important region for international student recruitment, and is home to a number of significant sending markets, notably Nigeria and Kenya. And now we can add Ghana to that list as well as another important emerging African market that is increasingly on the radar of international student recruiters. As is the case for students in other Sub-Saharan countries, Ghanaian students have historically chosen to study in the US or the UK. But as we hear in today’s feature interview, the market is now shifting and students are more actively looking at options in a wider range of study destinations. Michael Aidoo is the CEO and executive director of the Accra-based agency CELC International. In our first interview segment below, he notes an increasing interest in study in Europe – a trend which is enabled in part by an underlying strengthening of foreign language training in Ghana. At the same time, other destinations countries, including the UAE and Australia, have expanded their recruitment activities in-market. In our next interview segment below, Mr Aidoo highlights the role of the country’s burgeoning oil and gas industry as a factor in the growing demand for study abroad. As more multinational companies expand their footprint in the country, a growing number of those corporations are offering scholarships for Ghanaian students to pursue higher education abroad. Additional scholarship support is available from the national government, including the Ghana Education Trust Fund (the GET Fund) as well as through programmes offered by foreign governments, including Russia, China, and Germany. For educators approaching the Ghanaian market for the first time, or perhaps expanding their recruiting efforts in the country, Mr Aidoo advises careful study of the market first, to establish a presence in the country, and to partner with carefully selected local agents. “In Ghana, you have to be a registered agency. You must register with the Ghana Education Service,” says Mr Aidoo. “Not only that, you should be a registered company in Ghana. That is the most important thing.” For additional background, please see:

Most Recent

  • Survey finds “growing pressure” on youth group travel to UK this year Read More
  • Malta: Non-EU students keeping ELT weeks stable in the face of falling enrolment from Europe Read More
  • UK to rejoin Erasmus+ in 2027 Read More

Most Popular

  • Which countries will contribute the most to global student mobility in 2030? Read More
  • Research shows link between study abroad and poverty alleviation  Read More
  • Beyond the Big Four: How demand for study abroad is shifting to destinations in Asia and Europe Read More

Because you found this article interesting

Survey finds “growing pressure” on youth group travel to UK this year Findings from a February-March 2026 pulse survey conducted by the British Educational Travel Association (BETA) highlight “growing pressure”...
Read more
Malta: Non-EU students keeping ELT weeks stable in the face of falling enrolment from Europe Data from Malta’s National Statistics Office shows that the characteristics of Malta’s English Language Teaching (ELT) sector are...
Read more
UK to rejoin Erasmus+ in 2027 The UK will rejoin the Erasmus+ mobility programme in 2027 for an initial one-year term. This will end...
Read more
US to end “Duration of Status” for F, J, and I visas and limit the time international students can study in the US It is likely that as of September 2026, most international students in the US will need to complete...
Read more
Demand for “future proofing” programmes rising fast among college-aged students As we speak, many international student prospects are changing their minds about what they should study. Over just...
Read more
ICEF Podcast: Sustainable international student recruitment from a UK-China perspective Listen in as ICEF’s Craig Riggs and Martijn van de Veen recap some of the latest developments in...
Read more
France directs universities to charge higher tuition fees to non-EU students starting September 2026 French Higher Education, Research and Space Minister Philippe Baptiste announced on 21 April that almost all non-EU students...
Read more
UK: 7 in 10 universities report declining international postgraduate enrolments; visa rejections are part of the story Of universities in the UK surveyed recently by the British Universities International Liaison Association (BUILA), 7 in 10...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links