Record Number Of Foreign Students Hit US

FILE - In this May 2012 file photo, Chinese students wait outside the U.S. Embassy for their visa application interviews in Beijing, China, Wednesday, May 2, 2012.  Hundreds of thousands of Chinese students are flocking to U.S. colleges and universities, helping to drive the number of international students studying in America to record levels, according to a report to be released Monday, Nov. 11, 2013.   (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)Mint Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of thousands of Chinese students are flocking to U.S. colleges and universities, helping to drive the number of international students studying in America to record levels.

Similarly, all-time high numbers of American students are studying abroad, although there are far fewer and they tend to do much shorter stints than students coming to the United States.  

The findings are in an analysis being released Monday that was conducted by a nonprofit group that worked with the State Department.

They say international education programs do more than advance cultural enrichment; they also are an economic boon to communities that host foreign students and to the students themselves, who improve their job competitiveness.

Foreign students contribute about $24 billion annually to the U.S. economy and about two-thirds of them primarily pay their own way or their families do, according to the Institute of International Education and the State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

All told, 819,644 students came to the United States to study abroad in the 2012-13 school year. The highest numbers were from China, India, South Korea, Saudi Arabia and Canada. That’s a record high, with a 7 percent increase from a year earlier and 40 percent from more than a decade ago. Despite the increases, international students make up less than 4 percent of all students.

There was some slowdown in the number of students coming to the United States in the years after the Sept. 11 attacks, in part because of visa issues, but the number has since rebounded.

About 235,000 of the international students were from China, a 21 percent increase. A burgeoning middle class combined with a view that America has quality colleges and universities were factors cited as driving the demand. About one-third studied business and management once they arrived, the report said.

“Chinese students and their parents are looking for high quality education, get the importance of international education, and it’s making America the No. 1 destination because we actually have the capacity to absorb international students,” said Allan Goodman, president and CEO of the institute.

The number of students from Saudi Arabia studying in the United States jumped 30 percent, to 45,000. These students are largely funded by a Saudi government scholarship program nearly in its 10th year, the report said.

The top destinations for international students were the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in Champaign, Ill., Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., New York University, and Columbia University in New York.

By contrast, 283,332 U.S. students studied abroad for academic credit — a 3 percent increase from a year earlier.

In the past 20 years, the number of U.S. students studying abroad has tripled. But less than 10 percent of American students study abroad during their college years. The United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, France and China were the top destinations.

Attention tied to the Beijing Olympics and more classes taught in English are factors starting to drive more American students to China, Goodman said. A State Department program called 100,000 Strong, which officially started in 2010, aims to send 100,000 American students to China over a four-year period.

The report found that 14,887 Americans studied in China in 2011-2012 — a 2 percent increase, but that doesn’t include students going to China for noncredit programs.

“We encourage study abroad whether it’s short term, long term, whether it’s credit, noncredit,” said Evan Ryan, a State Department official, on a conference call with reporters.

http://www.mintpressnews.com/record-number-foreign-students-hit-us/172454/

3 thoughts on “Record Number Of Foreign Students Hit US

  1. Those foreign students love coming to america. They go to school, they, can work a job and not have to pay taxes for 7 years – at least that is the way it was a few years ago -, and they are eligible to receive benefits like heating assisstance, food stamps, and more. My grandmother used to rent to foreign students and I saw the receipts that they were getting including renters assisstance even. My grandmother loved renting to those foreign students because she said that the govt. takes care of those foreigners and because of that she never had to worry about getting her rent money that they owed her.

    1. Yep, the bastards need to go back to their own country and demand a real education from their own government instead of stealing ours (not like our indoctrination camps are any better).

      No more FOREIGN STUDENTS! NO MORE FOREIGN WORKERS! No MORE WEALTH BEING STOLEN BY FOREIGNERS!!! Enough of this crap!

      If they come over here, they are subject to the same laws and have to pay like everyone else or get the F**K out! End of story.

  2. The Chinese must figure we have better indoctrination techniques over here.

    We DID get Hitler’s best and brightest in the field of mind control, after all.

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