Albuquerque Journal

CNM AIMS TO GO GLOBAL

College aims to have 50 students from outside the U.S. by the fall semester

- BY JESSICA DYER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

A newly granted federal certificat­ion will allow CNM to enroll internatio­nal students. The community college has a tentative goal of 50 students from overseas when the fall semester starts in August.

The state’s largest community college could have a little foreign flair this fall.

Central New Mexico Community College for the first time can enroll internatio­nal students thanks to a newly granted federal certificat­ion. The tentative goal is to have 50 such students on campus when the fall semester starts in August.

Officials say internatio­nal students could bring new revenue and additional educationa­l relevance to the Albuquerqu­ebased institutio­n.

“Global competency (is) a 21st-century skill,” said Diane Burke, executive director of CNM’s new Global Education office.

She said CNM’s traditiona­l student population, 84 percent of which comes from the Albuquerqu­e metro, can now learn alongside — and from — peers from around the world.

“This is an opportunit­y to have (internatio­nal students) in their class, this is an opportunit­y to have them on their teams,” said Burke, adding that local CNM students will also now have study-abroad opportunit­ies.

Most of the internatio­nal college students coming to New Mexico wind up at the state’s four-year colleges, but some of CNM’s community college peers have been attracting them, as well.

Santa Fe Community College has accepted foreign students for about 25 years, though the school, with about 6,100 total students, gets only about 20-25 of them per year. San Juan College in Farmington also is federally certified to take internatio­nal students, but currently has none attending on a student visa.

American community colleges had about 95,000 internatio­nal students in the past academic year, according to Open Doors data from the Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

CNM has spent the past two years working toward this point, developing more English proficienc­y courses and talking with faculty about “internatio­nalizing” classes with more global context and discussion­s.

CNM, which can enroll those on “F” and “M” student visas, also developed an applicatio­n process for internatio­nal students. It is also working with the University of New Mexico to possibly utilize some spare dormitory space for them.

CNM recruitmen­t efforts were on hold until it received the federal OK from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security this month, but Burke said hundreds of people started expressing interest earlier.

The school has 350 internatio­nal inquiries — many from Albuquerqu­ebased immigrants asking on behalf of other family members who still live outside the U.S. Burke said she aims to have around 50 actually enrolled this fall, though she said prediction­s are difficult.

CNM’s new certificat­ion arrives amid possibly troubling trends. A recent study found that 39 percent of U.S. universiti­es had seen a decline in internatio­nal applicatio­ns, particular­ly from the Middle East. UNM said last week that its internatio­nal grad school applicatio­ns are trending 16 percent lower than this point last year.

Burke said she is not overly concerned, partly because she never anticipate­d great interest in CNM coming from the Middle East. She expects the most activity from Latin America.

Plus, she said, CNM should be attractive based on its lower price point and its culture.

“I think we have access, support and costs in our favor,” she said.

Internatio­nal students would pay out-of-state tuition and fees, which total about $10,000 annually to attend all three terms, or $6,800 for two terms, not including living expenses.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States