Colleges hope to bring more international students to campus this fall

by Jeremy

Dive Brief:

  • This spring, most international students studied in person at more than half of 414 colleges and universities surveyed by the Institute of International Education.
  • Applications from this group are up at 43% of responding colleges for the next academic year, nearly double the share saying so a year ago.
  • International students could still face hurdles reaching the U.S., including delays in visa processing and uncertain vaccination protocols at colleges. international students

Dive Insight:

I found that colleges have provided flexibility and a range of support to international students during the pandemic.

Eight in 10 respondents said they enrolled international students in face-to-face and online classes this spring, and most schools said these students took at least one virtual course. Respondents said they have adapted advising and course schedules to accommodate international students.

Meanwhile, the share of colleges offering this cohort emergency funding increased from spring 2020, as did their communications to these students on health and wellbeing. A more significant percentage of respondents also said they allowed electronic signatures on documentation for students’ visas.

Looking ahead to fall, no respondents said they planned to offer only online instruction, and 90% said they’d provide international students an in-person study option in the U.S. This is critical for recruiting international students, as current guidance requires new students to be in a program with an in-person learning requirement to enter the U.S.

Of the 90% of respondents who promised a face-to-face option for international students, more than half were schools planning in-person and online classes, while a third planned to provide only in-person courses for them.

Federal agencies have loosened and clarified restrictions on international students, changes that could give colleges more confidence that they will be able to enroll here this fall. Higher education groups have also asked them to address visa processing delays, including streamlining the process.

The New York Times reported that schools may consider students with vaccines approved by the World Health Organization as vaccinated. Vaccination protocols could be a hurdle, given that students outside the country may have received shots not approved for use in the U.S. Nearly two-thirds of respondents said they would offer vaccines on campus, and just under half said they don’t plan to require vaccinations before they get to campus. Scientists and colleges are still exploring how to address students who earned a vaccine that’s not WHO-approved.

Students who can’t make it to the U.S. will be offered the option to defer to spring 2022 at more than three-quarters of responding schools, IIE’s survey found. And just under half said they would allow international students to enroll online until they could come to campus.

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