Students will be able to study and work anywhere in the world with new post-Brexit scheme - how it works

The Turning scheme will fund global exchanges for about 35,000 UK students (Photo: Shutterstock)The Turning scheme will fund global exchanges for about 35,000 UK students (Photo: Shutterstock)
The Turning scheme will fund global exchanges for about 35,000 UK students (Photo: Shutterstock)

Students will now be able to study and work anywhere in the world as part of a new exchange scheme being launched by the government.

The scheme will replace the Erasmus exchange programme now that the UK has left the European Union, and will allow for worldwide exchanges for universities, schools, colleges and work placements.

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Applications for funding

From September, the £110 million Turning scheme will fund global exchanges for about 35,000 UK students, and will target disadvantaged students and those from under-represented areas.

The government claims the Turing scheme, named after Alan Turing, the English mathematician and computer scientist who died in 1954, offers benefits to students