Dayton Daily News

Survey: Fewer foreign students coming to U.S.

Uncertain social, political climate cited as a factor.

- Stephanie Saul ©2017 The New York Times

The first new college class since the election of Donald Trump has arrived on campus, and new numbers confirm what the higher education industry had feared: Fewer foreign students are coming to the United States.

The number of newly arriving internatio­nal students declined an average 7 percent in fall 2017, with 45 percent of campuses reporting drops in new internatio­nal enrollment, according to a survey of nearly 500 campuses across the country by the Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

Experts cited an uncertain social and political climate in the United States as part of the reason for the decline in enrollment.

“It’s a mix of factors,” said Rajika Bhandari, head of research for the institute, which collects data on internatio­nal students in cooperatio­n with the State Department. “Concerns around the travel ban had a lot to do with concerns around personal safety based on a few incidents involving internatio­nal students, and a generalize­d concern about whether they’re safe.”

Another reason for the decline is increasing competitio­n from countries like Canada, Britain and Australia, said Allan E. Goodman, president of the institute.

The figures released Monday also included final numbers for 2016-2017, which show robust internatio­nal enrollment, with a record 1.08 million internatio­nal students in the United States, an increase of 85 percent from a decade earlier.

Much of the record was driven by 175,000 students who have remained in the United States after completing their degrees, in internship-type programs known as “optional practical training.”

The 2016-2017 figures, though, revealed that firsttime internatio­nal students dropped 3 percent, indicating that the decline had begun before Trump took office.

The drop in new students signals potential financial difficulti­es for some small universiti­es that have come to rely on money from foreign students, who provide an infusion of $39 billion into the U.S. economy each year.

Particular­ly hard hit are campuses in the Midwest, according to the institute.

At the University of Iowa, overall internatio­nal enrollment this fall was 3,564, down from 4,100 in 2015.

Downing Thomas, the university’s dean of internatio­nal programs, said that some other schools in the Big Ten are also experienci­ng declines, and none are seeing the rapid increases of the recent past.

While Iowa primarily lost Chinese students, the University of Central Missouri experience­d a sharp decline this year in students from India, said Mike Godard, vice provost for enrollment management.

In the fall of 2016, the Warrensbur­g, Missouri, university had 2,638 internatio­nal students. This fall it has 944.

Godard said fewer students came from India partly because of a currency crisis in the country, but also because of concerns about the Trump administra­tion’s travel ban affecting Muslim countries. India was not on that list, but Godard said many of the university’s Indian students were from Muslim areas of the country and were concerned about the ban.

“Although India wasn’t listed as one of the countries, certainly feeling welcome and safe and all those things is important,” he said. “It would be naive to say that wasn’t a contributi­ng factor.”

Prospectiv­e students from India have expressed fears about the racial climate in the United States, concerns that might have been heightened after the shooting death in February of an Indian engineer in a suburban Kansas City bar.

 ?? YANA PASKOVA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A computer science class at New York University’s Tandon School of Engineerin­g, where some 80 percent of graduate students are from other countries.
YANA PASKOVA / THE NEW YORK TIMES A computer science class at New York University’s Tandon School of Engineerin­g, where some 80 percent of graduate students are from other countries.

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