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Fewer international students coming to U.S. for grad school in science and engin
Source: Carolyn Beeler


International student enrollment in graduate science and engineering programs in the US dropped in 2017 after several years of increases.                       

Science and engineering fields saw a 6% decrease in international graduate students from the fall of 2016 to the fall of 2017, and almost all of that decrease was concentrated in two fields: computer science and engineering.

This follows steady increases from 2005 to 2015 and comes at a time when demand for tech workers outstrips supply — and foreign-born students are increasingly filling a gap left by declining numbers of American citizens studying science and technology at the graduate level.

The biggest drop came from Indian students, whose numbers fell by 19% in 2017. Saudi Arabia, Iran and South Korea also sent fewer students in 2017.

The figures were released today in the 2018 Science and Engineering Indicators report from the National Science Foundation’s governing body, the National Science Board.

“In the U.S., (international students) are tremendously important,” said Geraldine Richmond, a member of the National Science Board and chemistry professor at the University of Oregon. “Over 50% of our graduate students in technical areas are from outside the country.”

The number of U.S.-born students in STEM graduate programs started declining in 2008, and international students have been important in keeping program numbers up, Richmond said.

“We have a research engine that needs to be fueled, and that fuel is really our graduate students,” Richmond said. “So, as we continue to try to attract the best and brightest in our country, we also seek to attract the best and brightest from these other countries.”

Graduate programs also feed, in part, into hubs like Silicon Valley, where more than half of tech workers are foreign-born.

“There is an insatiable demand. There’s more jobs than we can fill with the current slate of talent,” said Michael Morell, a founder of the tech recruiting firm Riveria Partners.

“The way we talk about it internally is, if you are an average or above-average engineer with core skills as a computer scientist, that is probably a negative unemployment rate.”

The new National Science Board report doesn’t try to explain why enrollment numbers dropped in 2017.   

Geraldine Richmond said it will be important to see if this one-year dip turns into a trend. She points to the relatively high costs of coming to the U.S. for graduate school, as well as increasing competition from China, as possible contributing factors.

A survey last year by the American Association of College Registrar and Admissions Officers raised similar concerns about international students overall.
Students from India concerned about job prospects, safety

The concerns of Indian students planning to attend graduate school in the next few years suggest this dip might not be a one-year aberration.

Several students interviewed by PRI.org worried that with changing U.S. immigration policies under President Trump's administration, they may not be able to get jobs after graduation, which would saddle them with the debt of an American degree but provide few of the benefits. Some worried about their personal safety as cases of anti-immigrant violence make news around the world. Others were turned off simply by the high cost of pursuing a degree in the US.

Many are looking to Canada, Australia, Germany and the U.K. as possible destinations for graduate school instead of the U.S.

One of those students is Sai Shouri, a senior studying IT at an engineering college in Hyderabad, India. When he was a kid, relatives who lived in the U.S. would come back to India for visits and tell him about the job opportunities and comfortable lifestyle that came with living in the US.   

“Since my childhood, I had dreams of the U.S., studying in the U.S. as well as getting settled in the U.S.,” Shouri said.

Four years ago, he started an undergraduate degree in IT specifically so he’d be competitive for a computer science master’s program in the U.S. But his plans changed in a single moment in the fall of 2016.

“That moment was when Trump was elected,” Shouri said.

Shouri had followed Trump’s America-first campaign platform and his promises to restrict immigration to increase job opportunities for citizens.   

“We used to believe that,” Shouri said. “If he really gets to be the president of the United States of America, then we might have a tougher situation.”

He thought landing a job might be harder, and after hearing about anti-immigrant violence in the US, like how two Indian men were shot in a Kansas City bar last February, he feared for his safety.

“What if I get attacked by some random guy?” Shouri worried.

It was enough for Shouri to ditch his decade-old dream to study in the United States.   

“(I was) shattered for some time, for a couple of days I was, like, totally aimless.”
Canada’s immigrant-friendly reputation attractive to students

International enrollment trends in Australia and Canada are moving in the opposite direction. International students in Australian colleges and universities were up 15% from March 2016 to March 2017.   

Canada also saw increases.

“This is a moment for Canada to shine,” said Paul Davidson, president of Universities Canada, which represents nearly 100 institutions across the country.

“We have seen an 11% increase in international enrollment at Canadian universities over the last year,” Davidson said.

He first started seeing increases of interest in Canadian universities after Brexit. Then came Trump's January 2017 travel ban.

“The weekend that that happened, my iPhone was absolutely dancing across the table, because the world wants to find an alternative,” Davidson said.

That Canadian alternative caught Shouri’s eye when researching graduate school options outside the U.S. after Trump’s election.

“I was reading about that country, and I fell in love,” Shouri said.

Shouri started chatting online with Canadians and found them welcoming.

“They don’t mind which country you’re from, what’s your financial status, how you look, how you talk, they don’t care about any of those things,” Shouri said.   

That rosy view of Canada was reinforced by what Shouri saw on the news.

“You can see the prime minister (Justin Trudeau), how he’s accepting the Syrian refugees, going to the airport, receiving them one by one, hugging each of them,” Shouri said. “And you can see Mr. Trump. And you can see a contrast between them.”

Shouri has applied to five computer science programs in Canada and hopes to start at one of them in September.

He still wants to work at a big tech company like Google — just in their Canadian office.

And he hopes that one day he’ll return home to Hyderabad with stories of how great his new home is. It just probably won’t be in the U.S.


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