Editorial Standards

How every AOEC guide stays official-first live-checked openly corrected

Official-first sourcing, live data, named authors, and transparent corrections: the standards behind every study-abroad guide we publish for Indian students.

Official-first sourcingLive data, not memoryNamed authorsTransparent corrections

AOEC India publishes study-abroad guidance for Indian students using an official-first research process. Every fee, deadline, visa rule and exchange rate in our guides is drawn from a primary source checked at the time of writing, attributed to a named author, and corrected in the open when facts change. This page sets out exactly how that happens.

Choosing where to study abroad is a decision worth tens of lakhs of rupees and several years of your life. You deserve to know where our numbers come from, who stands behind them, and what we do when we get something wrong. This page documents the standards every AOEC India guide is held to, so you can judge our work rather than take it on trust.

Our editorial promise in brief

  • We source fees, visa rules and deadlines from official government, university and ranking-body pages first, never from competitor blogs or listicles.
  • We do not publish figures from memory. Every data point is fetched live from its source at the time we write or update an article.
  • Currency conversions to INR use a live exchange rate captured on the day of writing, with the date shown next to the figure.
  • Every guide carries a named author, a clear last-updated date, and a list of the sources we used.
  • When a fact changes or we make a mistake, we correct the published article and date the change.

Where our numbers come from

AOEC India ranks every source against a three-tier hierarchy. Tier A is the official body that publishes a figure first-hand. Tier B is peer-reviewed research, a standards body, or an official press release. Tier C is a reputable third party, used only when no official source exists, and always with an attributed hedge.

For any number that affects your money or your eligibility, we go to the organisation that owns the data. Tuition comes from the university registrar or official fees page. Visa fees, work rights and post-study rules come from the relevant immigration authority or embassy. Rankings come from the ranking body itself, named with its edition year. We do not accept a figure simply because another website repeated it.

TierWhat it isExamples we useWhen we use it
Tier AThe official body that publishes the data first-handGovernment and immigration sites, embassy pages, university registrars, official scheme pagesAlways preferred whenever one exists
Tier BPeer-reviewed research, standards bodies, official press releasesAcademic journals, OECD, Eurostat, official announcementsOnly when Tier A does not publish the figure
Tier CReputable third party, last resortQS, Times Higher Education, ICEF Monitor, BBC, Reuters, HSBCOnly when no Tier A or B source exists, always with an "according to" hedge

If a claim can only be traced to a consultancy blog, a study-abroad aggregator, a forum, or a listicle, we follow the trail upstream to the original official source and cite that instead. If no official source exists, we drop the number and state the point qualitatively rather than pass off an unverifiable figure as fact.

We do not publish from memory

No statistic, fee, date or rule in an AOEC India guide is written from recall. Every factual claim is fetched from a live web source during the research stage of that specific article. If a figure cannot be tied to a page retrieved in that run, it is dropped or rewritten as a qualitative statement before publishing.

Study-abroad facts go stale fast. Visa fees rise, intake calendars shift, scholarship amounts change, and rankings refresh every year. Treating anything from last year as still-true is how outdated advice spreads. So our writers are required to open the source and confirm the current figure as they write, even when an older number feels right. A claim that cannot be confirmed against a current page does not make it into the article.

How we handle currency and INR conversions

AOEC India converts every foreign-currency figure to Indian rupees using a live exchange rate captured from Google on the day the article is written, not a lagging reference rate. The native currency is shown first, the INR equivalent follows in brackets, and the capture date is printed near the top of each guide because rates move every day.

When a guide quotes tuition, living costs, visa charges or scholarship stipends, you see the original currency and an indicative rupee figure side by side, for example a fee shown in euros with its approximate value in lakhs. The conversion rate and the date we captured it are disclosed in the article, so you can re-check today’s rate before you budget. We treat these conversions as indicative, because exchange rates change intraday and the rate your bank gives you will differ.

How we keep facts fresh

AOEC India applies a freshness limit to every category of fact. Fees, scholarship amounts and visa charges must reflect the current intake or calendar year. Visa and work-rights rules are re-verified against the official page within twelve months. Rankings cite only the latest published edition. Anything outside its window is re-sourced or removed before the article goes live.

Each guide shows a visible Last Updated date so you can see how current it is at a glance. We prioritise refreshing money-and-deadline topics, because those are the figures that change most often and cost you the most if they are wrong. Where a new intake cycle has not yet been announced, we say so explicitly rather than carry last cycle’s dates forward as if they still apply.

Who writes and reviews our guides

Every AOEC India guide carries a named author with a counselling background, not an anonymous byline. Our content is written and reviewed by counsellors who advise Indian students on admissions and visas day to day, so the guidance reflects real cases, not just published rules. Author profiles link to the person responsible for the article.

Our default author and reviewer is Kongara Sridhar, a senior study-abroad counsellor at AOEC India. Where a guide reflects first-hand experience from our study-abroad counselling work, such as patterns we see in student applications or visa briefings, we say so plainly in the text. We label experience as experience and published rules as rules, and we keep the two clearly separated.

How we correct mistakes

AOEC India corrects errors in the open. When a fact changes or a reader flags a mistake, we update the published guide, refresh its last-updated date, and adjust the affected figure rather than quietly leaving stale information online. Material corrections are made promptly once verified against the official source.

Rules and fees can change between the day we publish and the day you read a guide. If you spot a figure that looks out of date or wrong, please tell us and point us to the official source. We would genuinely rather hear about it and fix it than have a single reader budget on an old number. Corrections reach our editorial team through the AOEC India contact channels.

What we will never do

Some practices are common in study-abroad content and we refuse them on principle:

No invented data
We never make up a fee, success rate, deadline or statistic to fill a gap. If we cannot source it, we leave it out.
No recycled claims
We do not cite competitor consultancies, aggregators or listicles as authorities. We trace every claim to its official origin.
No guaranteed outcomes
We never promise admissions, visas or scholarships. Decisions rest with universities and immigration authorities, and our guides say so.
No hidden sponsorship
Editorial guidance is kept separate from any commercial relationship, and our recommendations are not for sale.

Spotted something that needs fixing?

If a figure in any of our guides looks out of date, tell us and we will check it against the official source.

These standards exist to make our work checkable. To learn who we are and how we help Indian students study abroad, read About AOEC India.