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Louisiana colleges open doors for foreign students as numbers rise

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  • Louisiana colleges open doors for foreign students as numbers rise

    The Daily Advertiser
    Thursday, March 17, 2005

    Louisiana colleges open doors for foreign students as numbers rise

    Marsha Sills
    [email protected]

    While the number of international students in the country declined 2.4
    percent during the past academic year, the number of non-American students
    in Louisiana has increased, according to a Institute of International
    Education report.

    The study ranked Louisiana 25th in the country the number of foreign
    students on the state's college campuses.

    The Institute of International Education's Open Doors 2004 annual report
    documents foreign student mobility in the United States, as well as the
    number of American students studying abroad. The IIE is a nonprofit agency
    focused on education and cultural exchanges.

    What brings a foreign student to study abroad in America varies. Ask
    American students why they chose their school, and the answer would likely
    change from person to person.

    For Beatrice Talon, attending university outside of her native Haiti was the
    only option if she wanted to study graphic design. Talon is in her third
    year at UL and is the secretary of the International Student Council.

    Talon and about 600 other international students are celebrating their
    cultures and countries during International Week. She said the purpose of
    the event is to open eyes in the community to the wealth of diversity
    offered on campus in each student, including internationals.

    "We're hoping more people realize that we are on campus and that we have
    activities," Talon said. "We have a lot to offer with our different
    traditions and cultures and all the stories we come with."

    Those stories are slipping away in some parts of the country as fewer
    foreign students are attending college in the United States. The Institute
    of International Education's report attributes the decline to rising tuition
    costs and students' difficulty in obtaining visas, especially in scientific
    or technical fields of study. Also, the IIE cites heavy recruiting of the
    diverse students from other English-speaking countries.

    This spring on UL's campus, there are about 660 foreign students from about
    100 countries, including lone students from Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, Equatorial
    Guinea and Moldova.

    Many of those students find out about the university through word of mouth
    or on the Web, said Rose Honegger, director of the Office of International
    Affairs. The department helps international students acclimate to American
    university life.

    "Word of mouth is how a lot of students know about our campus, but also our
    office. We've tried to get our Web site linked and translated into many
    other languages," Honegger said. "I know, for example, some of our Japanese
    students have found out about our campuses through links in the Japanese
    language."

    This spring, foreign students make up 4.2 percent of the student body. Last
    fall it was 4.3 percent. In the past five years, the number of
    internationals has declined. In fall 2000, about 5.3 percent of the student
    body was from another country.

    On UL's campus the dominant source of international students hail from
    India, although since 2000, the number of Indian students enrolled has also
    slightly decreased.

    In fall 2000, 245 Indian students enrolled at UL. This spring, 207 are
    enrolled. Honegger said she believes a number of Indian students learn about
    the university by word of mouth.

    "A lot of them (Indian students) say that they found out about our campus
    through other students," Honegger said. "A majority attend for computer
    science and engineering department. They say they have a similar interest as
    the professor that they want to work with."

    Nationally, Indian students are the largest pool of internationals who
    choose to study in the United States, with a total of 79,376 students.

    Last year, the state saw 6,621 foreign students or a 1.3 percent increase of
    internationals enrolled in universities compared to the prior year. The
    number of American students enrolled in Louisiana schools studying abroad
    was only 1,901. UL has a number of exchange programs that encourage students
    to study abroad in France, Mexico, England and Italy. The petroleum
    engineering department is also part of the US-Brazil Higher Education
    Consortia Program, offering an exchange program for students at universities
    in Brazil.

    Last year, LSU and Tulane had the highest number of internationals. About
    1,813 international students were enrolled at LSU, while at Tulane there
    were 1,043 internationals enrolled. The leading field of study for foreign
    students in Louisiana is engineering with 29.2 percent, followed closely by
    business and management with 18.7 percent. The leading country of origin was
    India with 22.9 percent, or 1,514 students.

    Foreign students who come to study in the U.S. leave their money here. The
    report estimates a $12 billion economic impact on the U.S. economy and a
    $126 million economic impact in Louisiana by foreign students and their
    families on tuition and living expenses.


    Originally published March 17, 2005
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