USA TODAY International Edition

More college students coming ( and going) overseas for school

Rise in internatio­nal students helps boost revenue, reputation­s

- Mary Beth Marklein @ mbmarklein USA TODAY

More than 800,000 internatio­nal students, nearly half of them from China, India and South Korea, were enrolled in a U. S. college or university last year, a 7.2% increase over the previous year.

The numbers of U. S. students earning academic credit abroad are on the rise, too, but at a slower rate and on a smaller scale.

Those are among findings of an annual report on internatio­nal student enrollment, released today by the New York- based Institute of Internatio­nal Education, which publishes the data in partnershi­p with the State Department’s Bureau of Educationa­l and Cultural Affairs.

Students are traveling in both directions at record levels: The 819,644 internatio­nal students enrolled in U. S. institutio­ns during the 2012- 13 academic year pumped more than $ 24 billion into the economy, the report says. American students studying abroad increased 3.4%, to an all- time high of 283,332, in 2011- 12, the latest year for which those data are available, the report says.

Even so, nearly 70% of internatio­nal students are concentrat­ed in just 200 of the nation’s 4,000 colleges and universiti­es. And fewer than 10% of all U. S. undergradu­ates will study abroad by the time they graduate, the report shows.

“There is definitely still room for growth on both sides,” says Assistant Secretary of State Evan Ryan.

Colleges trying to build an internatio­nal reputation view it as a way to increase diversity on their campuses — and boost revenue.

Foreign students typically pay a higher non- resident tuition at public universiti­es than U. S. students. Overseas, many middle- and upper- income families see a U. S. college degree as a ticket toward success for their child. Among details in the report:

China continues to send the

most students to the USA, including 235,597 last year, up 21.4% from the year before.

One of the largest increases, 30.5%, came from Saudi Arabia; its 44,566 students are largely funded by a Saudi government scholarshi­p program.

Participat­ion by Brazil students increased 20.4%, largely because of a new government scholarshi­p program for undergradu­ates.

The University of Southern California, University of Illinois- Urbana- Champaign, Purdue University and New York University each hosted more than 9,000 internatio­nal students, the most of any campus.

The United Kingdom hosted the largest number of U. S. students, 34,660 in 2011- 12, followed by Italy, Spain and France.

Japan, which was hit hard by a tsunami in early 2011, saw a rebound in interest among U. S. students. Participat­ion increased 27.8%, to 5,283, in 2011- 12 as study- abroad providers resumed programs.

Nearly 60% of U. S. students who went abroad studied over the summer or for eight weeks or less.

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