0 an amount of money given to a person by an organization, such as a university, to pay for them to study --
1 the financial office of a college, school, or university: --
2 a sum of money given to a person by an organization, such as a university, to pay for them to study: --
The £500 bursary allows people to explore and de ne a research question.
Among the questions institutions are grappling with are: do universities give lots of little bursaries or a few big ones and what effect will that have on the market?
There are a plethora of variables that universities are contending with to set the bursaries, at the heart of which lie two apparently incompatible imperatives: social responsibility and market forces.
The group 'students ' comprised undergraduates and postgraduates of higher and specialized secondary education, as well as students of professional-technical schools, who received bursaries from the state.
The proportion of bursary recipients in the total population continued to increase, following the post-war trend.
In addition, some students may be eligible for bursaries on top of their grants.
In this period all successful students were eligible for a bursary.
The percentage of bursary recipients (students on bursaries) was small (1.4-1.8 per cent).