MCLC: 1/3 of foreign students in US are from China

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Fri Feb 14 08:55:53 EST 2014


MCLC LIST
From: kirk (denton.2 at osu.edu)
Subject: 1/3 of foreign students in US are from China
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Source: Chronicle of Higher Education
(2/7/14):http://chronicle.com/blogs/data/2014/02/07/almost-one-third-of-all
-foreign-students-are-from-china/

Almost One-Third of All Foreign Students in U.S. Are From China

More than a quarter of a million Chinese students (287,260, to be exact)
hold active U.S. student visas, which is more than the number of students
from Europe, South America, Africa, Australia, and elsewhere in North
America combined. In fact, Chinese students account for 29 percent of all
foreign students studying in the United States.

China sends more than twice as many students to American colleges,
universities, and postsecondary vocational programs as does India, which,
with more than 105,000 students, is the second-largest source country.
South Korea comes in third, with 91,693.
The data are from a quarterly report
<http://www.ice.gov/doclib/sevis/pdf/by-the-numbers1.pdf> released last
week by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and are accurate as of
January 15.

It might not seem surprising that the world’s most populous countries send
the most students to the United States, but the change over the last 15
years is striking.

The proportion of foreign students in the United States who are from China
has increased more than sixfold in that time. In 1997, China accounted for
just 4 percent of student-visa recipients. About one-third as many student
visas were issued in China as were issued in both South Korea and Japan.
And China sent about one-fifth as many students to the United States as
Europe did.

And yet, even with the growth since then, the United States still educates
a very small proportion of Chinese students. In 2010 there were almost 134
million people in China ages 20 to 24 (the closest we can get to “college
age”), according to the latest estimates from the United Nations. So the
number of Chinese students at American universities represents only about
two-tenths of 1 percent of college-age Chinese citizens.

Still, Chinese students are slightly overrepresented at American colleges
in terms of global population ratios. College-age Chinese adults make up
about 20 percent of all college-age adults in the world (outside of the
United States), but represent almost 30 percent of all foreign students in
the United States. International students accounted for just under 4
percent of all students in the United States in 2012-13, according to the
Institute of International Education.

Some more interesting tidbits on student-visa holders in the United States:

It may not come as a surprise that California, with its proximity to the
Pacific Rim, is home to the largest percentage of students from Asia: 16
percent of Asian students in the United States are studying in California.
Likewise, it is probably to be expected that Florida plays host to 17
percent of all students from South America, the largest concentration of
students from that continent.

But here’s a less obvious fact: Students from Africa are most likely to be
studying in Texas. Thirteen percent of all African students are in the
Lone Star State.

Three of the five colleges with the most foreign students are private.
Here are all five, with the number of foreign students and the percent of
all students who are from abroad:

University of Southern California: 10,487 (26%)
Purdue University: 9,673 (24%)
University of Illinois: 9,605 (22%)
New York University: 9,247 (21%)
Columbia University: 9,201(35%*)

Percentages are estimates based on Fall 2012 enrollment data.



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