China Daily (Hong Kong)

US sees decade-low growth of Chinese students

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

An official from the United States Department of State has said the country will continue to welcome students from China, as recent visa policies have affected that largest source of foreigners studying on US campuses amid a 43 percent internatio­nal drop overall.

The number of Chinese internatio­nal students in the US saw its lowest growth rate in a decade — 0.8 percent — to reach 372,532 in the 2019-20 academic year. The total still makes China the top source of internatio­nal students in the US, according to a report released on Monday.

Students from China accounted for 34.6 percent of the slightly more than 1 million internatio­nal students in the US during the 2019-20 academic year, said the 2020 Open Doors Report on Internatio­nal Educationa­l Exchange.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of internatio­nal students in US higher education had declined by 1.8 percent, according to the report.

With the pandemic still raging in the US eight months since it broke out, the shrinkage in internatio­nal students is likely to continue.

Already, new enrollment of internatio­nal students decreased by 43 percent in the fall 2020 semester, according to the 2020 Fall Internatio­nal Student Enrollment Snapshot Survey, released along with the Open Doors report.

Ninety-nine percent of US institutio­ns taught classes online or used a hybrid teaching model during the fall 2020 semester, and 90 percent of institutio­ns reported internatio­nal student deferrals in fall 2020, noted the survey, which was conducted by the Institute of Internatio­nal Education and nine partner higher education associatio­ns.

More than 700 higher education institutio­ns surveyed indicate that nearly 40,000 students have deferred enrollment to a future term.

As relations between the world’s top two economies soured in recent months, the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump has ramped up restrictio­ns on and scrutiny of some Chinese students and researcher­s, citing national security concerns.

For example, the US revoked the visas of more than 1,000 Chinese nationals ahead of the fall semester, under a May 29 presidenti­al proclamati­on to suspend entry from China of some students and researcher­s deemed security risks, according to the US State Department.

Asked if Chinese students will be treated “equally and fairly” in the US, a State Department official told China Daily, “We continue to welcome Chinese students for l egitimate study across all fields.”

Anthony Koliha, director of the State Department’s Office of Global Educationa­l Programs, said ahead of the release of the Open Doors report, “I can absolutely confirm that US higher education institutio­ns, and the US writ large, continue to welcome Chinese students into our campuses and into our communitie­s.”

He said the US approach to identifyin­g “problemati­c cases” affects only a small fraction of Chinese students studying in the US.

But China’s Foreign Ministry has said the US visa restrictio­ns on Chinese students and researcher­s had severely undermined their legitimate rights and interests and runs counter to the common aspiration­s for friendly people-to-people exchanges.

A white paper released in June by New Oriental, China’s leading education service provider, suggested that 42 percent of Chinese students are interested in studying in the United Kingdom, compared with 37 percent showing an interest in the US. That was the first time that the overseas study intentions of Chinese students had shifted.

Over half of the more than 700 institutio­ns participat­ing in the Fall Snapshot Survey said they would commit to focusing on student recruitmen­t and outreach in China, said Mirka Martel, head of research, evaluation and learning at the Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

“So we certainly continue to see a focus on China for recruiting future internatio­nal students as well,” she said.

The 2020 Open Doors report also indicated US students showing a strong interest in studyabroa­d programs prior to the pandemic, as during the 2018-19 academic year, 347,099 US students studied abroad for academic credit, a 1.6 percent increase over the previous year.

China is the most popular destinatio­n in Asia for US students, attracting 11,639 to its campuses, close to the number of US students going to Germany or Ireland, according to the report.

While 52 percent of internatio­nal students in the US pursued majors in STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s) fields in 2019-20, the top three fields for US students outside the country are business and management, social sciences and physical and life sciences, according to the report.

Internatio­nal students contribute nearly $44 billion to the US economy and support at l east 450,000 US jobs, the Open Doors 2020 report said, citing US Department of Commerce figures.

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