International Graduate School Enrollments Decline In
Consecutive Years (First Time Ever)
By Professor Doom
Gloom and doom
reports have always been around. I can find “new reports” of the dollar
becoming worthless from the turn of the century…and similar reports from last
week. Sooner or later they’ll be right, I suppose.
Even a tiny rise in my tumor markers can presage the final run of cancer through my body...and the collapse of the mightiest dam begins with a tiny crack. A crack has shown up in higher ed.
I’ve been talking
about higher ed on my blog for five years, and while I’ve avoided talk of
complete collapse, the structures we’ve built are only supported by the student
loan scam…get rid of that constant income stream and 90% of higher ed will
shrivel overnight.
Outside of student
loans for our citizens, a big source of money for campuses was international
students, eager to get a taste of what, in the 20th century, was the
greatest higher educational system on the planet. This money is nothing next to
the student loan scam, and we’ve abandoned much of our original system in favor
of extracting ever larger amounts of student loan money from our own citizens.
The rest of the
world has been figuring out that it’s no longer worth paying ever higher
tuition for ever weaker education, so the
following is only natural:
New International Graduate
Enrollments Decline, Again
New
enrollments of international students at U.S. graduate schools declined by
1 percent from fall 2017 to fall 2018, and international
applications fell by 4 percent, survey finds.
Now, yes, it’s
only a few percent, but it’s telling. Our leaders in higher ed looted the
undergraduate programs years ago, but it took nearly twenty years before people
started realizing the bulk of degree programs are both exorbitantly expensive
and worthless.
It’s the same
thing with graduate programs, where “washing out” is all but impossible from
most graduate schools. The international students, with their own money on the
line, will be the first casualty.
“This is the first time we’ve seen declines across two consecutive
years, and while we think it’s too soon to consider this a trend, it is
troubling…We continue to monitor issues, including changes in immigration and
visa policy, with growing concern over the possible negative impact to the
U.S.’s image as a welcoming destination for international students and
scholars.”
Note carefully:
this is the first time we’ve seen a consecutive year drop. Perhaps it’s
nothing, but I don’t think so. While the above tries to tie it in to our
nation’s long overdue concern about illegal immigration…that’s a wild
misdirection.
It’s about the
expense, and the education. Graduate programs used to have only a few dozen
students in departments with a dozen faculty, with courses typically having a
handful of students at most (as should be the case, considering the very
esoteric topics of real graduate coursework). Now many campuses sport few full
time faculty, but nevertheless have triple or more the number of graduate
students of decades ago…leading to
a huge Ph.D. glut we’ve known about for years, with Ph.D. mill
campuses churning out far more academics than the schools can employ.
Less research-intensive universities -- many of which have come to
rely on international students in master's programs as a key source of revenue
-- were hit hardest by the decline in new international master's students.
First-time international enrollment in master's programs fell by 15 percent
at master's-level institutions, and by 8 percent at doctorate-granting
institutions outside of those classified as most research intensive.
It used to be the
international students were a bonanza for the school, great money for the cost
of educating them. But then the student loan scam came along, and there was
just no need to keep the graduate programs legit, and that leads to the real
issue.
The reason I
thought some schools would survive the loss of the student loan scam because of
the foreign graduate students but…our schools are abandoning this revenue in
exchange for taking in even more student loan dollars, as I’ve covered several
graduate programs, even at top
tier schools, who have turned their graduate departments into just
another cash cow, expecting no repercussions any worse than for destroying the
undergraduate education.
I see our
“leaders’” point: it’s just so much easier suckering the locals with the
student loan scam, than building up a school good enough to attract students
from 10,000 miles away, willing to pay with their own money.
The rest of
the article I quoted from breaks things down a bit by country and program and
perhaps this is all just a minor statistical blip, of no real meaning. I’m not
ready to predict more doom just on this but if the U.S. is no longer attracting
international students, we’re definitely going to have a huge problem once we
finally eliminate the student loan scam.
It’s amazing how
there’s always that “one person” who tries to make everything about politics in
a discussion thread. Even in the supposedly rarified air of higher ed, such is
common:
Given the growing hostility to foreigners in this country, both
in and out of academe, is it surprising that international graduate students are
choosing to study elsewhere?
Wait, what? The
bulk of foreign students are coming from China and India…nobody here is
“hostile” to them in general, and what hostility there is, is towards people
coming here illegally. It’s a complete non-sequitur to tie the legal arrival of
scholars to our grad schools to the illegal crossings of our border.
In any event,
we’ve now seen a consecutive year decline in international students in our
schools. It’s fair to ignore it for now…but what if it happens again next year?
How many years in a row would it take before the leaders of higher ed would
realize they’re falsely assuming the river of student loans will never run dry?
Is destroying our graduate system so these guys can buy more lakefront property
such a good idea? Why not keep at least parts of our graduate programs legit? I
mean, other than because doing so would require real work, something our
leaders aren’t particularly interested in.
www.professorconfess.blogspot.com
As an outsider reading probably 6 US newspapers per day I would believe that you are hostile towards international students, travellers and certainly diplomatic past partners
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm sorry you believe that, but it's incorrect. I'm not even remotely hostile towards international students, and can't even understand why I would be. Similarly, I can't fathom why I should be hostile towards travelers, much less how you could glean such from my post. I have no idea what you mean by "diplomatic past partners," can you explain?
DeleteI certainly never related my comments to your posts. I related them to what I read in the USA media.
DeleteI hope your health is improving and you have a full recovery
What you have to understand about American newspapers is that approximately 10% of the total content has any relation to reality. The rest is Leftist lies and propaganda, printed to push their anti-American agenda.
DeleteOh, by "you" you meant "Americans." Sorry, I misunderstood.
DeleteNo, Americans don't care about international students, and certainly don't care about travelers, never in my life have I heard someone complain about such things (beyond "tourists," but that's mostly talking about people coming from the Northern USA to the south).
And, yes, our newspapers are horrible, and give a poor representation of reality.