Yorkshire Post

Universiti­es will never shut doors on a world of talent

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AT LAST, it seems the country is waking up to the news that internatio­nal students have been given a hard time for no reason. It appears the Government has been sitting on a report showing that internatio­nal students don’t all stay in the UK after they graduate. This, I’m afraid, is nothing new.

For years now, there has been a disturbing run of stories about internatio­nal students. As vicechance­llor of the University of Sheffield, I have found myself repeatedly knocking down those claims.

They include internatio­nal students are taking the places of UK students; they don’t speak good English; they aren’t integrated; they are a drain on local economies and services. And, worst and most racist of all, they damage the experience of home students who would be so much better off in some whitewashe­d English-only university.

I feel sick to my stomach that we have to answer such nonsense, but we also have a duty to tell the truth.

First of all, internatio­nal students don’t take the place of British students. They prop up courses and university finances, funding facilities which are used by UK and internatio­nal students alike and making teaching viable, particular­ly in expensive-to-deliver areas like science and engineerin­g. Those are the precise areas we need for our economy.

And it’s not just teaching. Internatio­nal student funding is the one area that hasn’t been frozen since the 2007 Budget statement, in which the then government promised a flat cash settlement for science funding that wasn’t tied to inflation – a fall in real terms – with no increases in student fees.

As a result, we have been able to continue to innovate and build our local economies, but nobody should be under an illusion. The wonderful facilities in towns and cities across the nation, that create jobs and attract inward investment to boost our flagging city centres, are all dependent on this global injection of funds and people. Without internatio­nal students, it would all stop.

When it comes to English-language teaching standards, we have challengin­g English-language requiremen­ts across the board, and continue to support English standards during periods of study.

The lack of integratio­n is yet another myth. Internatio­nal students are more – not less – likely to volunteer in our local communitie­s. In a recent festival in Sheffield, 75 per cent of volunteers were internatio­nal students. National societies all adopt a local charity. Students from India and China teach maths to children whose parents can’t afford tuition in some of the poorest parts of this city.

As for being a drain on our services in the city, our internatio­nal students are on the early morning and night shifts of the highly-rated teaching hospitals across this region. According to thinktank Oxford Economics, even when you take off the costs of services which they use, they contribute 10 per cent of total inward investment to the region.

Look out over the city of Sheffield and you will see cranes that are only there because of internatio­nal students. New facilities are being built to attract talent in areas like engineerin­g. We, as a university, have subsidised the building of the UK’s capability in advanced manufactur­ing research, empowering British companies to win orders and train 600 apprentice­s.

We have taken land at the old Orgreave colliery — a site famous for a bloody clash between police and coal miners in 1984 — and turned it into a global hub for UK industrial strategy. Without internatio­nal students, Orgreave would still be a slag heap.

So what about that final myth – that internatio­nal students damage the experience of home students? Well here, I see red and so do our students, British and internatio­nal. They say the opposite. They are not afraid of being proudly British or whatever home nationalit­y you would like to mention (my university welcomes students from 130 countries). They are also global citizens, the generation who will have to address climate change, internatio­nal conflict, food security, sustainabl­e developmen­t and demographi­c changes… together.

How and where do they learn to address these problems with people from all over the world? Here. At Britain’s great universiti­es. The place which has long been the home of the most talented scholars from around the world and where 30 per cent of our staff are from overseas.

This is why I was proud to begin a campaign to say why #WeAreInter­national with our students, staff and alumni. And why I am even prouder that it has been adopted by universiti­es across this country.

If the UK really does want to be open to the world, it could learn something from our universiti­es. We are a place of hope and excellence because we are internatio­nal.

The day we hide the truth of this and pretend that we would be better off with less sharing, less interactio­n, would be a brutal day for this country and a disaster for the quality education for which we have so rightly become globally respected.

 ??  ?? MYTH BUSTING: Despite recent claims, internatio­nal students bring vital funding for world-leading research in Britain, as well as contributi­ng to the communitie­s they live in.
MYTH BUSTING: Despite recent claims, internatio­nal students bring vital funding for world-leading research in Britain, as well as contributi­ng to the communitie­s they live in.
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