Mahasiswa China dan India di Amerika bukan saja
banyak, tetapi mereka juga mengambil bidang yang tough
(science, engineering, medicine, business), bukan soft
sciences.  Dan jangan dilupakan, bahwa mahasiswa itu
menghirup sesuatu yang tidak didapat di negara mereka:
semangat eksplorasi sepuas-puasnya.  

Salam,
RM

--------------------------------------------

December 21, 2004

U.S. Slips in Attracting the World's Best Students
By SAM DILLON 
 
American universities, which for half a century have
attracted the world's best and brightest students with
little effort, are suddenly facing intense competition
as higher education undergoes rapid globalization. 

The European Union, moving methodically to compete
with American universities, is streamlining the
continent's higher education system and offering
American-style degree programs taught in English.
Britain, Australia and New Zealand are aggressively
recruiting foreign students, as are Asian centers like
Taiwan and Hong Kong. And China, which has declared
that transforming 100 universities into world-class
research institutions is a national priority, is
persuading top Chinese scholars to return home from
American universities. 

"What we're starting to see in terms of international
students now having options outside the U.S. for
high-quality education is just the tip of the
iceberg," said David G. Payne, an executive director
of the Educational Testing Service, which administers
several tests taken by foreign students to gain
admission to American universities. "Other countries
are just starting to expand their capacity for
offering graduate education. In the future, foreign
students will have far greater opportunities." 

Foreign students contribute $13 billion to the
American economy annually. But this year brought clear
signs that the United States' overwhelming dominance
of international higher education may be ending. In
July, Mr. Payne briefed the National Academy of
Sciences on a sharp plunge in the number of students
from India and China who had taken the most recent
administration of the Graduate Record Exam, a
requirement for applying to most graduate schools; it
had dropped by half.

Foreign applications to American graduate schools
declined 28 percent this year. Actual foreign graduate
student enrollments dropped 6 percent. Enrollments of
all foreign students, in undergraduate, graduate and
postdoctoral programs, fell for the first time in
three decades in an annual census released this fall.
Meanwhile, university enrollments have been surging in
England, Germany and other countries. 

Some of the American decline, experts agree, is due to
post-Sept. 11 delays in processing student visas,
which have discouraged thousands of students, not only
from the Middle East but also from dozens of other
nations, from enrolling in the United States. American
educators and even some foreign ones say the visa
difficulties are helping foreign schools increase
their share of the market. 

"International education is big business for all of
the Anglophone countries, and the U.S. traditionally
has dominated the market without having to try very
hard," said Tim O'Brien, international development
director at Nottingham Trent University in England.
"Now Australia, the U.K., Ireland, New Zealand and
Canada are competing for that dollar, and our lives
have been made easier because of the difficulties that
students are having getting into the U.S.

"International students say it's not worth queuing up
for two days outside the U.S. consulate in whatever
country they are in to get a visa when they can go to
the U.K. so much more easily." 

American educators have been concerned since the fall
of 2002, when large numbers of foreign students
experienced delays in visa processing. But few noticed
the rapid emergence of higher education as a global
industry until quite recently. 

"Many U.S. campuses have not yet geared up for the
competition," said Peggy Blumenthal, a vice president
at the Institute for International Education.

Still, Ms. Blumenthal said, it remains unclear whether
the sudden decline in foreign enrollments is a
one-time drop or the beginning of a long slide. 

Not all educators are expressing concern.

Steven B. Sample, president of the University of
Southern California - which last year had 6,647
foreign students, the most of any American university
- said colleagues who lead other universities had
expressed anxiety at professional meetings.

"But we compete no holds barred among ourselves for
the best faculty, for students, for gifts and for
grants, and that's one of the reasons for our
strength," Dr. Sample said. "Now we'll compete with
some overseas universities. Fine with me, bring 'em
on."

Certainly many American universities continue to be
extraordinary global brand names. Shanghai Jiao Tong
University has compiled an online academic ranking of
500 world universities, using criteria like the number
of Nobel Prizes won by faculty members and academic
articles published
(ed.sjtu.edu.cn/rank/2004/2004Main.htm). Of the top 20
on the list, 17 are American. Of the top 500, 170 are
American.

During 2002, the most recent year for which comparable
figures are available, some 586,000 foreign students
were enrolled in United States universities, compared
with about 270,000 in Britain, the world's
second-largest higher education destination, and
227,000 in Germany, the third-largest. Foreign
enrollments increased by 15 percent that year in
Britain, and in Germany by 10 percent. 

The countries exporting the most students were China,
South Korea and India, but the annual global migration
to overseas universities involves two million students
from many countries traveling in many directions. That
number is exploding - by some estimates it will
quadruple by 2025 - as economic growth produces
millions of new middle-class students across Asia.

In October, the Organization for Economic Development
and Cooperation, an economic forum for 30 leading
industrial nations, took note of this global movement
in a study. Stéphan Vincent-Lancrin, an analyst at the
organization's headquarters in Paris and an author of
the study, said that traditionally most countries,
including the United States, had tried to attract
foreign students as a way of disseminating their
nation's core values. 

But three other strategies emerged in the 1990's, Dr.
Vincent-Lancrin said. Countries with aging populations
like Canada and Germany, pursuing a "skilled
migration" approach, have sought to recruit talented
students in strategic disciplines and to encourage
them to settle after graduation. Germany subsidizes
foreign students so generously that their education is
free.

Australia and New Zealand, pursuing a "revenue
generating" approach, treat higher education as an
industry, charging foreign students full tuition. They
compete effectively in the world market because they
offer quality education and the costs of attaining
some degrees in those countries are lower than in the
United States. Emerging countries like India, China
and Singapore, pursuing a "capacity building"
approach, view study abroad by thousands of their
nation's students as a way of training future
professors and researchers for their own university
systems, which are expanding rapidly, Dr.
Vincent-Lancrin said. 

In August a delegation of education officials from
Singapore visited Mary Sue Coleman, the president of
the University of Michigan, at the Ann Arbor campus.
They took over a conference room, set up computers and
peppered her with questions about tuition policy,
fund-raising, governance and research, Dr. Coleman
recalled. They wanted to know how Michigan became a
prominent university, and how it was run today.

"Eventually they'll reap the benefits of this work,"
Dr. Coleman said. "Singapore will create world-class
universities. Other countries are taking the same
approach. We're going to have enormous competition.
We'd better be prepared for it."

The rapid changes in India and China have special
importance. The number of Indian students in the
United States has more than doubled in a decade, to
80,000, the largest representation of any country. The
62,000 students from China make up the second-largest
group. Graduate students and degree holders from those
countries play a critical role in American science,
engineering and information technology research. 

Some 28 percent fewer Indian students applied to
attend American graduate schools this fall than last
year, according to a survey by the Council of Graduate
Schools. This matched the overall decline for all
foreign students. 

Rabindranath Panda, the education consul at India's
consulate in New York, said that huge private
investments in Indian higher education in recent years
had greatly increased options at home for Indian
students, and that those who wished to study abroad
were increasingly looking at universities not only in
the United States and Britain but also in France,
Germany, Singapore and elsewhere.

Higher education is undergoing even more sweeping
transformation in China. The number of students
seeking a postsecondary degree is expected to rise to
16 million students by 2005 from 11 million in 2000
and to keep rising thereafter, according to a recent
report by the Organization for Economic Development
and Cooperation. Even if only a small minority of
those new students seek a foreign degree, they will
enlarge their already important presence at hundreds
of overseas universities. 

But the new wave of Chinese students may not wash into
the United States. Educators say applicants from China
face more visa difficulties than applicants from any
country outside the Middle East.

One reason, they say, appears to be that many Chinese
students pursue the science disciplines that set off a
screening process known as Visa Mantis, intended to
prevent the transfer of sensitive technology. A
Congressional study found that during a three-month
period last year, more than half of all the Visa
Mantis investigations worldwide involved Chinese
students. The especially long visa delays experienced
by Chinese students are a major irritant for many
university presidents.

"Chinese students are getting heightened scrutiny,"
said the president of Princeton University, Shirley M.
Tilghman. "I've asked many people for the rationale,
but I've never gotten an answer that makes sense."

Chinese applications to American graduate schools fell
45 percent this year, while several European countries
announced surges in Chinese enrollment.

"We had an especially large increase in Chinese
students," said Martina Nibbeling-Wriessnig, a
spokeswoman for the German Embassy in Washington.

The United States is also losing some Chinese
scholars, partly because of China's strategic decision
over the last decade to channel special investments to
100 universities with a view to building them into
world-class research giants capable of winning Nobel
Prizes. 

In October, Dr. Coleman of the University of Michigan
visited Shanghai Jiao Tong University, which created
the online university ranking system and has also
built a vast new campus. Partly because Dr. Coleman is
a biochemist, her hosts took her to visit their new
pharmacy school. It had hired 16 professors, she said
- all of them returned from American universities.

But not only Chinese universities are seeking to lure
top faculty members from American campuses.

"Baseball's World Series includes only American
teams," said Michael Crow, president of Arizona State
University. "But higher education is truly a world
series now, because we're competing for students and
faculty against universities all over the world."



The New York Times 


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
$4.98 domain names from Yahoo!. Register anything.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Q7_YsB/neXJAA/yQLSAA/BRUplB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

***************************************************************************
Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. www.ppi-india.uni.cc
***************************************************************************
__________________________________________________________________________
Mohon Perhatian:

1. Harap tdk. memposting/reply yg menyinggung SARA (kecuali sbg otokritik)
2. Pesan yg akan direply harap dihapus, kecuali yg akan dikomentari.
3. Lihat arsip sebelumnya, www.ppi-india.da.ru; 
4. Posting: ppiindia@yahoogroups.com
5. Satu email perhari: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
6. No-email/web only: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
7. kembali menerima email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to