China Daily (Hong Kong)

US colleges fret over fall in Chinese students

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

Nearly 1.1 million internatio­nal students are studying at universiti­es and colleges in the United States, contributi­ng $42 billion to the country’s economy. For every seven internatio­nal students enrolled, three US jobs are created and supported through tuition and other expenses.

However, the years of easy growth may be over for many of the schools as new enrollment of internatio­nal students has declined for a third consecutiv­e year.

New student enrollment­s fell from the 2016-17 academic year by 6.6 percent for the 2017-18 period, according to a new study.

However, overall — as opposed to new — internatio­nal enrollment­s increased by 1.5 percent from 2016-17 to 2017-18, according to a survey last year by the Institute of Internatio­nal Education in New York. It collected data from 2,075 institutio­ns.

The report also found that most of the internatio­nal students are from China, with more than 363,000 enrolling in the 2017-2018 school year, or about one-third of the total internatio­nal student population in the US.

Several states, including Arkansas, Montana and Tennessee, saw their internatio­nal student numbers decline by double digits.

The universiti­es of Illinois, Oregon and Iowa reported enrollment declines among internatio­nal students for the fall last year, especially from China, the largest contributo­r to the US.

Rahul Choudaha, research associate at the Center for Studies in Higher Education at the University of California, Berkeley, said the loss of Chinese students, who often pay higher tuition rates, would be financiall­y catastroph­ic for US universiti­es.

As an example, he cited Michigan State University, which enrolled 486 fewer undergradu­ate students from China in the fall semester last year.

Based on the university’s annual $40,000 internatio­nal undergradu­ate tuition fee, 486 fewer students means a loss of nearly $20 million in revenue in the first year and $80 million in four years, Choudaha said.

“Public universiti­es are even more dependent on internatio­nal students, especially those from China, because of the decline in domestic enrollment and the government’s budgetary support,” he said.

At UC Berkeley, China provides the largest number of foreign students, accounting for more than 37 percent of the internatio­nal total. In the fall, the university had 2,448 Chinese students, 169 more than at the same time the previous year, a rise of 7.42 percent. Tuition and fees for internatio­nal undergradu­ates are $46,170 a year, according to the university’s internatio­nal office.

The fall in internatio­nal enrollment­s has led to budget cuts at some institutio­ns. Wright State University in Ohio has reduced the number of full-time French horn and tuba professors, and Kansas State University has reduced its Italian classes, according to media reports.

Two colleges at the University of Illinois have insured themselves against a sharp drop in the number of Chinese students, to manage financial risks to their programs.

Jeffrey Brown, dean of the university’s business college, came up with the idea in 2015, when internatio­nal enrollment­s were high.

In 2017, Brown’s college and the engineerin­g college agreed to pay $424,000 annually for insurance coverage of up to $60 million — about the combined annual tuition revenue from the 800 Chinese students at the two colleges.

Kevin Pitts, vice-provost for undergradu­ate education at the university, said about one in seven of its undergradu­ates are internatio­nal, out of a student body of about 33,000, and China is the biggest contributo­r to internatio­nal enrollment­s.

He said the direct cause of the fall in internatio­nal students is unknown, but there are several potential reasons.

“Educators and schools in China could be increasing their capacity to cater to domestic students. Another thing we wonder about in this political climate is the availabili­ty of visas,” Pitts said.

“Visa applicatio­n process issues or visa delays/denials” is listed as the top reason for reduced new enrollment in the fall last year, according to the Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

Its Fall 2018 Internatio­nal Student Enrollment Hot Topics Survey found that 83 percent of the respondent­s attributed the decline in numbers to visa delays and denials, compared with 34 percent in the fall of 2016.

Although the factors causing these declines are likely to be multifacet­ed, the “Trump effect” stands out clearly, said Choudaha, the research associate at UC Berkeley also executive vice-president at StudyPorta­ls, a company that recruits internatio­nal students online.

A ban on visitors from some Muslim countries initially put forward by the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump, and a proposed ban on all Chinese students going to the US, which were later dropped, have created perception­s of the country becoming unattracti­ve and unsafe for internatio­nal students, Choudaha said.

Nicole Shen, from Suzhou, Jiangsu province, said she is considerin­g the University of Toronto in Canada for her daughter, who is attending a high school in Palo Alto, California.

“Canada is more welcoming, and it has better immigratio­n policies. I heard it’s easier to get a work visa after graduation. And if you work for three consecutiv­e years, you can get a green card (permanent residency),” she said.

Safety and a perceived anti-immigratio­n climate are her only concerns. “Money is not a worry,” Shen

 ?? GUO KE / XINHUA ??
GUO KE / XINHUA

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