Khaleej Times

SHARP RISE IN INDIANS STUDYING IN US

165,918 Indian students are studying in the Us

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India accounts for the largest growth of internatio­nal students in America, while China remains the top-sending country, according to Institute of Internatio­nal Education

new delhi — A record number of Indians were studying in the US during academic year 201516, a rise of 25 per cent over the last year, making it the second leading country of origin among internatio­nal students in America, according to a report released on Monday.

“This was the highest absolute increase of students ever and followed the previous year’s record growth,” according to the 2016 Open Doors Report on Internatio­nal Educationa­l Exchange.

Also, “the number of internatio­nal students at US colleges and universiti­es surpassed one million for the first time during the 201516 academic year, an increase of seven per cent from the previous year to a new high of nearly 1,044,000, representi­ng five per cent of the total student population at US institutio­ns,” it said.

The Open Doors report is published annually by the Institute of Internatio­nal Education in partnershi­p with the US Department of State’s Bureau of Educationa­l and Cultural Affairs.

“The new report indicates there were a record 165,918 students from India, a 25 per cent increase on the year before, making it the second leading country of origin among internatio­nal students in the United States,” it said.

The US hosts more of the world’s 4.5 million globally mobile college and university students than any other country in the world, more than double the number hosted by the UK, the second leading host country, the US Embassy here said in a statement, quoting from the report.

“In 2015-16, there were nearly 69,000 more internatio­nal students in US higher education compared to the previous year,” it said. “Higher education continues to be the bedrock of our people to people ties. More students from India studied in the United States than ever before — at all levels — and I am especially pleased to see the record back-to-back, year-onyear growth in student numbers,” US Ambassador Richard Verma was quoted as saying in the statement.

“With efforts such as our Passport to India initiative, we are also seeing the number of American students in India beginning to grow,” he added.

India accounts for one out of every six internatio­nal students in the US. Approximat­ely threefifth­s of Indian students are at the graduate level and threefourt­hs are in the STEM fields (science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s).

Open Doors also reports that over 313,000 US students received credit last year for study abroad during 2014-15, an increase of nearly three per cent over the previous year.

“India is ranked 13th among the top 25 destinatio­ns of US study abroad. The number of US students going to India to study for academic credit at their home university in the US decreased by 3.2 per cent to 4,438, although this number has remained relatively flat across the last five years at 4,500,” the report said.

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 ?? — AP ?? Babson College graduate school alumnus Abhinav Sureka (right) of Mumbai types in his work space at the college in Wellesle.
— AP Babson College graduate school alumnus Abhinav Sureka (right) of Mumbai types in his work space at the college in Wellesle.

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