The University of Latin American Integration is a public higher education institution managed by Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina. The University's main focus is on humanities courses geared towards the Latin American reality and future engineering courses such as renewable energy.
I went to visit to learn about the different areas and curricula, and it seemed to me that, except for strictly specialized courses like Medicine and Engineering, for example, the content of courses in the Humanities is driven by an ideological foundation.
A Workers' Party (PT) fantasy to promote defunct Bolivarianism and siphon off meager taxpayer resources by teaching totally bizarre "subjects" (quotation marks necessary) with a very clear ideological bias. Yet another milestone in Lula's stupidity.
I was a Unila student and I love the project and everything it entails. Unfortunately, there's still a lot of work to be done on the teaching and curriculum front, and that was one of the reasons I didn't continue. However, I have wonderful …
UNILA is an excellent university. The funniest thing I noticed while interacting with the students is that there are many rich people who pretend to be poor ?, it almost seems like a competition to see who owns the poorest iPhone. But, in …
Money well spent from the Mercosur Structural Convergence Fund. It's a shame that it will be attacked and dismantled by the Temer government, which has adopted the government program defeated at the polls, contrary to regional integration.
You open a selection process for diploma reuse with a very short deadline for submitting documents. I had 4 days to send the syllabus for my first course, and the university where I studied asked for 10 days. From what I've seen, most …
A public, free, and excellent university! For Brazilians to enter, it is necessary to take the ENEM exam, and for non-Brazilians, through the international selection process that begins in May (of the year prior to the start of classes).
I believe it's a wonderful project that will become a reality as events unfold, but it would be a grave mistake to politicize the university because this would create division. Our America needs scientifically skilled people who can …
It's a young, up-and-coming/excellent university that has the potential to become even better than it already is and consolidate itself within its initial proposal, and it will become even better with the completion of the campus!