Arab Times

US colleges draw fewer foreign students

‘Wake-up call … by no means a crisis’

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BOSTON, Nov 13, (AP): Internatio­nal enrollment­s at US colleges have fared better than expected this year, but many schools still fear the country’s political climate, according to a national survey.

The Institute of Internatio­nal Education reported Monday that the number of new students coming from abroad fell by an average of 7 percent at nearly 500 colleges and universiti­es surveyed this fall, but said the results from school to school are more mixed than many had feared.

Many schools neverthele­ss have concerns about the US political climate and fear that it could drive students away.

While 45 percent of schools saw declines in internatio­nal enrollment, nearly a third said their numbers have increased since last year, the survey found. The remaining 24 percent said they saw no change.

“It’s definitely a wake-up call, but by no means is it a crisis, and it does not come anywhere close to the precipitou­s decline and plummeting of numbers that the entire sector had been predicting,” said Rajika Bhandari, head of research, policy and practice for the nonprofit group based in New York.

The White House’s proposed travel bans and separate reports of violence against immigrants had fueled fears of a sharp decline in students coming from abroad. The anxiety spurred many campuses to boost their recruiting efforts, while some launched marketing campaigns meant to make foreign students feel welcome.

Despite the improved outlook, the survey found that half of the 500 colleges still worry the nation’s atmosphere could discourage potential students, and 20 percent reported that the climate has already led some students to leave.

“We don’t know what the trends are going to look like for next year, but for sure there are concerns,” Bhandari said.

The survey offers only a preview of this year’s trends and was released alongside the institute’s annual “Open Doors” report, which tracks internatio­nal students at 3,000 US schools but lags a year behind.

The broader survey covering the last school year found that US colleges hosted a record number of internatio­nal students but also saw new enrollment fall 3 percent since 2015, the first decrease in at least six years.

That downturn took place before the presidenti­al election and can be blamed on factors including the rising cost of tuition in the US, growing competitio­n from schools in other countries, and political factors outside the United States, the institute’s leaders said.

Government­s in Brazil and Saudi Arabia, for example, have slashed national programs that helped students study abroad in recent years, fueling a combined 23-percent drop in students from those countries last year.

“So many campuses are used to having very large numbers of Brazilians, very large numbers of Saudis, and now they need to think more about diversific­ation,” said Allan Goodman, president of the institute. “You can’t count on that steady stream any longer.”

Students from China and India made up nearly half of all internatio­nal students last year, reaching a combined 530,000. Their numbers have continued to grow, but at a much slower rate than in previous years. Iran, the only nation in President Donald Trump’s travel ban with heavy numbers of students in the US, sent 12,600 students here last year, an increase of about 3 percent.

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