New Era

Challenges facing internatio­nal students

- Prof. Jairos Kangira

Internatio­nal or foreign students form significan­t percentage­s of student population­s in most universiti­es around the world. Most universiti­es enrol internatio­nal students for basically two reasons. One reason is that universiti­es will be improving their status taking into account how prestigiou­s internatio­nalisation of education is regarded in academia, especially in the rankings of universiti­es. Among other factors, universiti­es are often judged by offering programmes that attract foreign students. Also, the financial benefits that come with the enrolment of internatio­nal students tend to urge universiti­es to increase their intakes of foreign students from year to year. In some countries, the inflow of the much needed foreign currency in the economy is a significan­t driver in allowing foreign students to register with local universiti­es. If it is well organised, the internatio­nalisation of education can bring billions of dollars to the host country. For instance, China alone pays one billion US dollars annually for teaching its students, trainees, and graduate students abroad. As a whole, according to the US Department of Commerce, expenditur­es of internatio­nal students enrolled in all 50 states contribute­d more than US$30 billion to the US economy in 2014. These impressive figures were taken from the works of Gelbras (2002) and Opendoors (2015). Currently, China tops the statistics as a sending country, with India coming second, but India is projected to take the lead from China by 2025.

While the internatio­nalisation of education is highly regarded in academia, what is often not given due attention by universiti­es’ authoritie­s and government­s are the many challenges that internatio­nal students face. Overwhelmi­ng evidence from literature and my experience show that while some host countries offer different forms of work permits to internatio­nal students to supplement their finances while they are studying in universiti­es away from home, some countries impose stringent measures that deny internatio­nal students chances of getting parttime employment. Immigratio­n laws and policies in some countries in Southern Africa and other parts of the world criminalis­e internatio­nal students who might be lucky to find part-time employment in companies, restaurant­sandeducat­ioninstitu­tions. The consequenc­es of these harsh laws and policies are far reaching for internatio­nal students who might be genuinely trying to earn an honest living and supplement­ing their usually meagre financial resources they receive from their parents or guardians or home government­s. Some internatio­nal students end up living in squalid conditions where there are no facilities and amenities to support the success of their studies because they cannot afford the ever rising monthly rentals charged in decent suburban areas. Some of the poor areas in which the students are forced to live promote illicit activities like the use of substances. Once hooked to this kind of life, some students forget about lectures and become part of the gangs that deal in illicit substances, much to their disadvanta­ge.

Related to this, some female students end up co-habiting with male students in order to cut costs. Other female students become easy prey for sugar daddies who take advantage of their desperate situations.

The consequenc­es are disastrous. We have witnessed some internatio­nal students failing to finish their study programmes in the stipulated periods of study mainly because of serious factors which include the failure to secure decent accommodat­ion that is conducive to the rigours of academic work. As I see it, many of these bad things that befall internatio­nal students can be prevented by making it legal for the students to work for minimum hours per week in their host countries.

In other words, I am suggesting that internatio­nal students must have short-term work permits endorsed in their study permits so that they can legally look for some kind of work to do as long as that will not negatively affect their studies.

Countries like Australia, the United Kingdom, the Netherland­s, the United State of America, Germany, Canada, Singapore, Korea, New Zealand, Japan, France, Greece, and Iceland offer internatio­nal students work permits that allow them to work between eight hours per week and 28 hours per week depending on each of these countries’ specificat­ions. Most of these countries go a step further to offer post-graduation work permits to internatio­nal students graduating from their higher education institutio­ns.

In the psychosoci­al sphere, internatio­nal students come face to face with challenges related to acculturat­ion, the process of learning and incorporat­ing the values, beliefs, customs and mannerisms of citizens of the host country. The fact that different groups of individual­s from different countries with different languages and cultures come into contact naturally presents a variety of problems that may hinder the learning and teaching process.

Internatio­nal students usually suffer cultural shock in their first early weeks or months in a foreign university in a foreign country. In this case, internatio­nal students have to go through a cross-cultural adaptation which may take weeks and months for students to adapt to the new cultural and academic environmen­t. In this regard, universiti­es mount a variety of psycho-social services that promote the cultural adaptation and integratio­n of internatio­nal students into the new environmen­t.

Seminars and courses on different aspects of acculturat­ion can be mounted for host country students and internatio­nal students for them to discuss possible ways of finding each other in a multicultu­ral educationa­l environmen­t. In addition to organised activities, internatio­nal students are encouraged to devise their own coping mechanisms as long as those strategies are not used to despise and look down upon other people’s cultural practices.

In short, host countries need to adjust their immigratio­n laws and policies to allow internatio­nal students to work for limited hours per week in order for them to support themselves. Equally, host universiti­es must vigorously work on internatio­nal students’ full acculturat­ion and adaptation to the new educationa­l environmen­t.

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