USA TODAY US Edition

Trump moves to restrict college students’ visas

4-year degree would be impossible for some

- Lindsay Schnell

Leon Lewis-Nicol can still hear the gunshots. If he closes his eyes, he can picture the burning buildings.

As a child in Freetown, Sierra Leone, a nation in West Africa devastated by civil war, Lewis-Nicol often imagined a better, safer life. His family fled the fighting, then returned to Sierra Leone before moving to Ghana, about 900 miles away, when he was 15. Friends who traveled spoke of an even safer place, with clean streets and unlimited opportunit­ies: the USA. Lewis-Nicol knew he had to go. The 24-year-old is here, studying to receive his master’s degree in jazz performanc­e from the University of Illinois. He’s been in the States four years – he earned his undergrad at Millikin University, a small, private school in Decatur, Illinois – set to graduate in 2022. He wonders whether other West African natives will have the same chance.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion unveiled proposed rule changes that would alter student visas, leaving the internatio­nal student community reeling a few weeks into the 2020-21 academic year. The proposed changes – which are detailed in a 256-page document online and have drawn hundreds of public comments – could devastate science research and tech innovation nationwide, experts warn.

“The overall tone of the proposed rules sends a chilling message to current and prospectiv­e internatio­nal students that we are no longer a welcoming nation,” said Stephen YaleLoehr, a professor and attorney at Cornell Law School who specialize­s in immigratio­n law. “It says we’re more focused on national security threats and that we suspect they could be coming here to do harm rather than help the U.S.”

Put another way: “It feels terrible,” Lewis-Nicol said. “The stigma is that if you’re from Africa, you’re not wanted and that your dreams are not as valid.”

The proposal comes on the heels of the Trump administra­tion’s introducti­on – then abandonmen­t – of a controvers­ial rule barring internatio­nal students from living in the USA while taking fall classes online during the pandemic. The administra­tion scrapped the policy after a slew of lawsuits.

According to Yale-Loehr’s analysis, the latest proposed changes would, among other things:

•Require most internatio­nal students to finish their studies in four years – even though, according to the National Student Clearingho­use, most first-time college students take more than five years to earn a bachelor’s degree, and many doctoral programs take more than four years.

“This is part of a larger anti-immigrant trend coming from this administra­tion.” Stephen Yale-Loehr, professor and attorney at Cornell Law School, specialist in immigratio­n law

h Limit stays for some internatio­nal students to two years.

h Require many internatio­nal students to apply for extensions to their visas with no guarantee that they’d receive them, especially if the immigratio­n agency determined that the student was not making sufficient progress toward a degree.

Students born in certain countries – particular­ly African nations, as well as Middle Eastern countries such as Afghanista­n, Iran and Iraq – would be limited to two-year visas, which means no four-year degrees.

At Millikin in Illinois, roughly 50% of the internatio­nal student population comes from countries whose citizens would be restricted by the rules, such as Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Cameroon and Nepal, among others.

The college’s Center for Internatio­nal Education is “sending things out almost constantly trying to calm the fears of our internatio­nal students,” Director Briana Quintenz said.

“It’s so unfair to them that they can’t just enjoy their college experience,” Quintenz said. “They have to continuall­y dissect these very confusing regulation­s that seem to be coming out all the time. … My biggest concern is that the already very rigid restrictio­ns are going to become even more complicate­d, and internatio­nal students are just going to stop trying to come to the U.S.”

Yale-Loehr said the proposed changes don’t necessaril­y come as a surprise.

“This is part of a larger anti-immigrant trend coming from this administra­tion,” Yale-Loehr said.

If the rule passes, it would be the biggest change to internatio­nal student regulation in almost 20 years.

After 9/11, the Department of Homeland Security started a program requiring colleges to monitor internatio­nal students to ensure they were here to study, not for alternativ­e purposes. Schools track whether internatio­nal students don’t take a full course load or suddenly drop out.

The system is “cumbersome,” YaleLoehr said, but it works: Universiti­es can see which students fall through the cracks. The proposed rule changes imply the system needs revamping, he said, “when colleges would tell you it’s working just fine.”

The Trump administra­tion said the rule would strengthen the system to make sure only legitimate students friendly to the USA come to the country’s universiti­es.

“Amending the relevant regulation­s is critical in improving program oversight mechanisms; preventing foreign adversarie­s from exploiting the country’s education environmen­t; and properly enforcing and strengthen­ing U.S. immigratio­n laws,” said Ken Cuccinelli, a senior immigratio­n official in the Department of Homeland Security.

Foreign students could apply to extend their stay or reapply for admission to the country, Cuccinelli said.

Internatio­nal students make up roughly 5% of students at American universiti­es and colleges. According to NAFSA, the associatio­n of internatio­nal educators, 1 million internatio­nal students contribute­d $41 billion to the U.S. economy in the 2018-19 academic year.

Most internatio­nal students pay full, out-of-state tuition costs, a boon to universiti­es that allows them to keep costs lower for domestic students. The money internatio­nal students spend on rent and at restaurant­s is especially important in Midwest college towns hit hard by recessions, said Gaurav Khanna, an economist at the University of California-San Diego. Then there are the academic concerns.

“This wouldn’t just affect the university sector,” Khanna said. “While internatio­nal students are here, they do critical research, but then after they graduate, a lot of them join the science and tech sector, where a lot of innovation happens.”

Dev Purandare is a doctoral computer science student at the University of California-Santa Cruz, who came to the USA from India four years ago. Like most internatio­nal students, he grew up believing the American higher education system was second to none.

“For education, you can’t do much better,” Purandare said. “We can come here and get degrees, participat­e in research. But we also contribute. Over the course of my career, I’ve been a teaching assistant, I’ve taught courses, and right now I’m mentoring undergradu­ate and graduate students. And many of them are from California.”

The uncertain future has shaken Purandare and other students.

“It’s demoralizi­ng to internatio­nal students to have to face a new crisis every month and wonder if we’ll be able to continue what we’re doing,” he said. “The lack of stability is really harmful for productivi­ty. I can’t make any sort of life plans. I can’t even get a cat – because what if I have to leave the next day or the next week?”

Purandare is in the middle of his doctoral program, and his visa will be up for renewal in the next year. He’s worried about how that process could play out. Even if he’s OK, he said, he’s likely to accept a post-doc position outside the USA, where he feels more welcome.

Lewis-Nicol dreams of becoming such an accomplish­ed musician, he can tour the world and win Grammys. Mostly, he wants to go back to Africa, build music schools and help his people. He thought the USA would be the best place to go to help fulfill his dreams, but he wonders whether he needs to look elsewhere. Maybe another country won’t define him solely by his birthplace.

“That’s why we’re leaving our countries, because we don’t want to be put in a box. We want opportunit­ies,” he said. “If America doesn’t want me, maybe I’ll go to Canada or somewhere else.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? The Trump administra­tion says the plan aims to ensure visiting students are friendly to the USA.
EVAN VUCCI/AP The Trump administra­tion says the plan aims to ensure visiting students are friendly to the USA.
 ?? SEAN RAYFORD/GETTY IMAGES ?? The government proposed changes that would limit visas for some internatio­nal students.
SEAN RAYFORD/GETTY IMAGES The government proposed changes that would limit visas for some internatio­nal students.
 ?? JOSHUA ROBERTS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ken Cuccinelli of the Department of Homeland Security defended the proposal as a move to protect the country.
JOSHUA ROBERTS/GETTY IMAGES Ken Cuccinelli of the Department of Homeland Security defended the proposal as a move to protect the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States