Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Foreign students decrease in state

University count tracks U.S. trend

- JAIME ADAME

A decline in the number of internatio­nal students has become a trend both nationally and in Arkansas, according to data from several universiti­es and national reports released Monday.

The U.S. hosted 1,075,496 internatio­nal students last year, down 1.8% from a year earlier, according to the annual Open Doors report from the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educationa­l and Cultural Affairs and the Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

The overall decline came after years of increases in foreign students hosted in the United States. But beginning in the 2016-17 academic year, new internatio­nal student enrollment­s started to drop off.

Internatio­nal students made up about 5.5% of the 19,720,000 students enrolled in U.S. higher education, according to the report.

The data is for the last academic year, while a separate survey done in October shows the pandemic is “impacting internatio­nal student enrollment on a global level and across all major countries that host internatio­nal students,” according to a report by the Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

Schools responding to the October survey described a decrease in internatio­nal students, even including those students taking courses online inside the U.S. or outside the country.

Several Arkansas universiti­es this fall have reported declines in their enrollment of internatio­nal students. The University of Arkansas,

Fayettevil­le and some other universiti­es in the state have seen declines going back to years before the pandemic.

School officials referred mostly to the pandemic when asked about factors leading to declines.

But policies under the administra­tion of President Donald Trump such as visa restrictio­ns have “likely contribute­d” to the decline nationally in the numbers of internatio­nal students, said Brendan Cantwell, an associate professor in Michigan State University’s Higher, Adult, and Lifelong Education program.

“The Covid-19 pandemic, competitio­n from other countries like Canada, the UK, and Australia, and an increased supply of good quality higher education around the world could also partly explain the decline of internatio­nal enrollment­s,” Cantwell, a higher education researcher, said in an email.

Under the administra­tion of President-elect Joe Biden, “I would not be surprised if we see a partial rebound of internatio­nal enrollment­s when the policy and political environmen­t changes under the Biden administra­tion,” Cantwell said.

Nationally, universiti­es responding to the Institute of Internatio­nal Education survey this October reported an increase in foreign students seeking to defer enrollment at U.S. colleges and universiti­es. Schools surveyed reported a 43% decline in new internatio­nal student enrollment­s, according to the report.

At UA-Fayettevil­le, deferrals by internatio­nal students had been rare before the pandemic, said university spokeswoma­n Amy Unruh. But for this fall, 110 students — including 99 graduate internatio­nal students — deferred admission, Unruh said.

The University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le reported that internatio­nal enrollment­s fell to 1,211 students this fall, down from 1,408 foreign students last year. Internatio­nal students this fall make up 4.4% of total enrollment at UA, according to university data.

Panama topped all other foreign countries in internatio­nal enrollment­s at UA, with 125 students attending from the country sometimes described as a link between Central America and South America. The university inked a deal with the country’s science division that has led over the last decade to large numbers of Panamanian­s studying at UA-Fayettevil­le.

Unruh said there was a “sharp decline” in new internatio­nal student enrollment­s.

There were a total of 203 new internatio­nal student enrollment­s, she said. The total includes 89 undergradu­ates, a 55% decline from the previous year, Unruh said.

UA-Fayettevil­le has seen its internatio­nal student enrollment decline now for five straight years, though before this fall the yearly declines had been modest. UA-Fayettevil­le enrolled 1,545 internatio­nal students in fall 2015, according to university data.

Patricia Gamboa, UA’s director of internatio­nal recruiting and admissions, in a statement said that in the years ahead, access to travel and visas are “out of our control due to the pandemic,” but “we hope that global circumstan­ces will soon make it easier for [internatio­nal students] to accept our offers and enroll in classes on our campus.”

Michael Freeman, director of UA’s Internatio­nal Students and Scholars, said in a statement that the university’s programs and alumni “point new internatio­nal students to the University of Arkansas.”

Arkansas State University has seen yearly declines in internatio­nal students for four straight years, according to university data.

Internatio­nal enrollment­s at ASU fell to 440 students this fall from 851 in fall 2016, according to university spokesman Bill Smith and data posted on ASU’s website.

Smith said the decline this fall is primarily because of the pandemic.

“Embassies and consulates were closed due to the global pandemic, and this resulted in many incoming students not being able to receive visas and necessary paperwork,” Smith said in an email.

China is the top country of origin for ASU internatio­nal students this year, with 76 Chinese students enrolled this fall, Smith said.

At the University of Central Arkansas, data for years before 2017 was not publicly available on the school’s website, but internatio­nal enrollment has declined each year since at least fall 2016.

The Conway university this fall has enrolled 408 internatio­nal students, down from 476 last fall and 630 in fall 2016, according to university data. UCA this fall enrolled 54 students from the Bahamas, the most of any foreign country, UCA spokeswoma­n Amanda Hoelzeman said.

In an email, Hoelzeman said that “economic hardships,” especially during the pandemic, contribute­d to the decline, and that some countries are not providing financial aid for their students at the same level as in the past.

“COVID-19 has also led to embassy closings, thus reducing visa services, as well as difficulti­es with arranging internatio­nal travel,” Hoelzeman said. She added: “Given all of this, we are pleased with the fall 2020 enrollment and look forward to seeing an improvemen­t in 2021.”

Among all countries, China had the most students in the United States, according to the Open Doors report. The 372,532 Chinese students in the U.S. in 2019-20 increased by 0.8% compared with the previous year. Second was India, with 193,124 students in the United States, followed by South Korea with 49,809 students.

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