Otago Daily Times

Number of foreign students in city vastly reduced

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

THIS was the first year

Chartsiri (Patty) Klinpibul has stayed in New Zealand over the summer.

Usually, the Otago Polytechni­c Students’ Associatio­n (OPSA) internatio­nal representa­tive would have returned home to Thailand.

With the borders closed this year, she could not.

But she was not the only internatio­nal student whose plans had been upended.

The intake was noticeably smaller at the polytechni­c this year, and the makeup of the intake was different, too, Miss Klinpibul said.

In the past, a larger number of internatio­nal students who had graduated year 13 at a New Zealand high school would have started at Otago Polytechni­c, she said.

But many of those pupils had returned home.

There were also normally European or North American arrivals who were in Dunedin on an exchange.

This year, she knew of none. ‘‘This cohort, especially, you get a lot of people who have worked, were on a working holiday visa, and now are studying,’’ Miss Klinpibul said.

Students at Otago Polytechni­c were offered a tour of Dunedin to start the year, but yesterday only four people boarded the tour bus.

Ting Chen, of China, was among them.

Mrs Chen arrived in Dunedin three weeks before lockdown.

She arrived with a work visa to be with her husband who is pursuing a PhD at the University of Otago.

Mrs Chen was starting her studies at Otago Polytechni­c hoping a ‘‘local degree’’ could help her find a better job.

Lei Zhou, also from China, had spent more than a year in the country on a working holiday visa before deciding to relocate to Dunedin to start a postgradua­te diploma in design at the polytechni­c.

An Otago Polytechni­c spokesman said there were 225 internatio­nal enrolments at the school, a drop of 44% compared with the correspond­ing time in 2020.

They were spread across the polytechni­c’s Dunedin, Central Otago and Auckland campuses. There were about 70 internatio­nal students enrolled for programmes at the Dunedin campus. Of those 70, about half were new to Otago Polytechni­c.

Otago Polytechni­c chief executive Megan Gibbons said about 20 Dunedinbas­ed students had study visas due to expire on March 31, but the school was working closely with them to ensure visa renewals allowed them to complete their studies.

Study Dunedin coordinato­r Margo Reid said two high schools out of the 12 in Dunedin had no enrolled internatio­nal pupils for 2021.

She knew of 121 internatio­nal pupils at the remaining schools — more than half of those were from China, she said.

Traditiona­lly, the numbers of internatio­nal pupils in the 12 high schools would number more than 400. This was a significan­t drop for the sector, she said.

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Leaning into learning . . . Lei Zhou (left) and Ting Chen, both of China, and Flynn Mankelow, of Oamaru, see the sights of Dunedin at Baldwin St before beginning study at Otago Polytechni­c this month.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Leaning into learning . . . Lei Zhou (left) and Ting Chen, both of China, and Flynn Mankelow, of Oamaru, see the sights of Dunedin at Baldwin St before beginning study at Otago Polytechni­c this month.

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