Baltimore Sun Sunday

Virus could hinder students

Universiti­es worry outbreak may block Chinese applicants

- BY LILLIAN REED AND LIZ BOWIE

As government­s and health agencies shut down travel and limit public gatherings in an attempt to contain the deadly coronaviru­s, Maryland colleges and universiti­es say the response could slow — or shut off — a pipeline of Chinese students.

Auditions at the Peabody Institute were more subdued last week as some Chinese applicants remained home, submitting their auditions digitally.

The Johns Hopkins University scrambled to provide students on its China campus access to online courses more than a year ahead of schedule while its building remains closed.

And Salisbury University is encouragin­g its Chinese-national seniors to apply for a student visa program that allows students to remain in Maryland and work for a year after graduation — giving them more time to cope with coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns.

Still, some Maryland colleges and universiti­es fear that all the disruption­s, such as prolonged air travel interrupti­ons, cancellati­on of standardiz­ed test dates in China and backlogs of visa applicatio­ns, increase uncertaint­y for foreign students and the institutio­ns

they want to attend.

“There is going to be a lot of concern,” said David L. Di Maria, associate vice provost for internatio­nal education at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. “It could take quite a while to dig out of this and return to normal.”

About 370,000 students from China are expected to stream into American universiti­es, according to data from the Institute of Internatio­nal Education. Most are here for four years to get an undergradu­ate degree or longer for a master’s degree or doctorate.

Of the 20,000 foreign students in Maryland’s private and public colleges and universiti­es, 40% come from China, a figure that has been growing in the past five years. It’s estimated that foreign students spend about $800 million a year in the state, according to a report by the internatio­nal education institute.

The institute reports that the University of Maryland has the largest population of internatio­nal students in the state. China contribute­d more graduate and undergradu­ate students to the university than any other country in 2018, the most recent year for which data was available. Chinese students comprise about 8% of College Park’s total enrollment of 40,000.

The university’s Robert H. Smith School of Business is exploring ways to accommodat­e students affected by a travel ban and is considerin­g online courses and a winter start date if students are unable to secure visas by August, Dean Ritu Agarwal said in an email.

University officials declined requests for an interview about how its other schools were preparing. Officials have advised newly admitted students facing challenges caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak to contact the university.

While the largest number of Chinese students are at the University of Maryland’s flagship campus in College Park, Johns Hopkins, UMBC, Morgan State University and Montgomery College also have hundreds of Chinese students.

Hopkins officials say they are aware of about 50 faculty, staff, students and scholars unable to return to U.S. campuses from China because of travel restrictio­ns.

The university has assembled a team to address the potential complicati­ons and evaluate contingenc­ies, said spokeswoma­n Karen Lancaster, adding that it is too early to speculate about alternativ­e plans.

Di Maria said the question that looms is how long the coronaviru­s continues to disrupt normal life and business in China. If new cases slow and most business returns to normal, universiti­es are not likely to see a big impact.

But if it continues far into the spring and summer, he said, universiti­es may have to get creative.

The College Board and other testing agencies canceled both the February and March test dates for students in mainland China to take the SAT, GRE and other exams required to apply to U.S. colleges.

Those tests are offered next in May — if they aren’t canceled — and there may be more students who need to take the exams than available seats. A backlog could develop.

Students might also find that getting visas may take longer and flights may be more limited.

Di Maria said UMBC has only about 100 students from China, and the university is not considerin­g the coronaviru­s in deciding whether to admit students from China.

Universiti­es take large numbers of foreign students for lots of reasons, but they also offer benefits to the United States over time.

Because many foreign students will go back to their countries and rise into leadership positions in government and businesses, they are more likely to feel connection­s to the state that will be valuable.

“They develop friendship­s. In some ways they become bicultural. They understand the nuances of the language,” Di Maria said.

They also help subsidize other students. Foreign students don’t qualify for federal or state funds. And they pay out-of-state tuition rates, which means they pay far more than most students and help keep tuition for Maryland residents down.

Without their presence, “you would have a lot of empty seats in your classroom,” said Di Maria.

Another area of concern for graduate schools in the state is the long-term collaborat­ive research conducted with academics in China, according to Amy Ramirez, director of internatio­nal services in the center for global engagement at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

She said there are about 20 cases of researcher­s, post-doctorates and faculty who wanted to go to China, or were from China and wanted to come here, but are now stuck.

“We are thinking about it from a research frame,” Ramirez said. “Our ability to have foreign students has implicatio­ns related to research.”

The UMB campus in downtown Baltimore, which is home to medical, dental, law and social work graduate schools, has about 200 Chinese nationals.

Officials at Frostburg University and Washington College say it’s too early to know whether the virus will have a long term impact on their admissions, but they will be monitoring the situation closely.

“There are a lot of unknowns,” said Brian Stigler, Salisbury University’s assistant provost for internatio­nal education.

Stigler said the top concern is students at partner universiti­es in China who planned to enroll at Salisbury in the fall.

“If the universiti­es in China do not open as scheduled next month, which is a possibilit­y,” he said, “those students will not have the support of their internatio­nal offices to organize the paperwork and supporting documents we need to begin their fall admissions processes.”

Even if the university partners resume operations, Stigler also worries about sufficient air travel for students come summer, and whether the federal government would grant student visas to Chinese students.

Brad Farnsworth, vice president at the American Council on Education, a higher education research and advocacy group, said he doesn’t believe the coronaviru­s will be a long-term concern for Chinese students who want to come to the U.S.

“These are wealthy middle-class families in China who place great stake in a student earning a degree in a foreign country,” he said.

But it may make universiti­es here look again at the dependence on China for such a large percentage of their foreign students.

“People have been saying for years it is time to diversify,” he said. “I think it will get the conversati­ons jump-started. This is the wake-up call.”

“There is going to be a lot of concern. It could take quite a while to dig out of this and return to normal.”

David L. Di Maria, associate vice provost for internatio­nal education at UMBC

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