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Record Numbers Of U.S. Students Are Applying To Colleges In The U.K.
Record Numbers Of U.S. Students Are Applying To Colleges In The U.K.

Forbes

time25 minutes ago

  • Business
  • Forbes

Record Numbers Of U.S. Students Are Applying To Colleges In The U.K.

The University of St Andrews in Scotland is one of the most popular destinations for U.S. ... More undergraduates studying in the U.K. A record number of American students are applying to colleges in the United Kindgom, this year, according to new data released last week. That surge in interest comes as the Trump administration continues its highly publicized campaign against many aspects of higher education in this country, including attacks on international students, cutbacks in research funding, pressure on university presidents, crackdowns on elite institutions, and challenges to various components of the curricula – particularly those having to do with diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. One apparent effect of these tactics is a marked increase in the number of American undergraduate students looking to U.K. institutions to continue their post-secondary education. New figures from the Universities and Colleges Admission Service show that by the June 30 deadline, 7,930 applications had been received from American students for the fall 2025 semester. That represents an almost 14% increase over the previous year, and it's the highest total since these data began to be collected in 2006. The UCAS is a shared or unified admissions system employed in the U.K. Similar to the Common App in the United States, it's used by many — but not all — American students applying to British and other U.K. institutions so it likely underestimates the total number of applicants from the U.S. In addition, because it deals only with undergraduate admissions, it does not capture the outflow of U.S. graduate students that also appears to be underway. The number of international students applying for undergraduate studies at U.K. universities and colleges through UCAS increased overall by 2.2%. The increase was driven by a record number of applicants from China, up 10%, in addition to year-over-year increases in applicants from Ireland (+15%), Nigeria (+23%) and the U.S.(+14%). Not only did applications increase, the number of offers made by U.K. institutions to international students also saw a substantial jump — up more than 9% over the prior year. Meanwhile, U.S. institutions are expecting international student enrollment to decrease this year. As examples: In the 2023-24 academic year, more than 1.1 million international college students were enrolled in the U.S, according to the Institute of International Education's Open Doors report. That number marked an all-time high, representing about 6% of all college students in the nation. Since the pandemic in 2020-21, when the number of international students declined by a record 15%, enrollments have increased by a total of 200,000 students over the past three years. However, the tide appears to be turning against the U.S. as a preferred destination for international students in the Trump era, and institutions in Europe, Australia and Asia are taking advantage and gaining market share. That shift is now being accompanied by an increasing number of American students deciding to look abroad to continue their education, with the U.K. becoming a major beneficiary of these decisions.

Harvard Faculty Who Fear School's Destruction Urge Trump Deal
Harvard Faculty Who Fear School's Destruction Urge Trump Deal

Bloomberg

time17 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Bloomberg

Harvard Faculty Who Fear School's Destruction Urge Trump Deal

Kit Parker is used to being an anomaly on Harvard University 's campus. The physicist — an Army Reserve colonel who served in Afghanistan — is a long-time critic of the school's hiring practices and what he sees as liberal biases. For months, he's urged the university to address criticisms from the White House, even as the vast majority of his colleagues applauded Harvard's decision to resist President Donald Trump's efforts to reshape higher education.

A reckoning: Trump's attacks are inspiring self-reflection in higher ed
A reckoning: Trump's attacks are inspiring self-reflection in higher ed

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

A reckoning: Trump's attacks are inspiring self-reflection in higher ed

The Trump administration's attacks against colleges and universities, including its attempts to pull federal funding and bar foreign students from Harvard University in the name of fighting antisemitism, have alarmed many in higher education. But they have also spurred a degree of self-reflection among some leaders in the field. There's a 'kernel of truth' in many of the leading criticisms of universities and colleges — the price tag, the perceived liberal bent of many educators, and the rise of campus antisemitism and discrimination — said Ted Mitchell. Mitchell, president of the American Council on Education, a nonpartisan association of 1,600 colleges across the country, said the Trump administration has 'called on higher education' to attend to these issues that have long lingered without sufficient action. The administration's pressure campaign comes at a time when public confidence in the nation's colleges is falling. Read more: Trump admin renews demand for Harvard foreign student info: 'We tried to do things the easy way' In the past decade, the share of Americans with high confidence in colleges and universities has fallen from 57% to 36%, primarily driven by concerns that colleges push a political agenda, don't teach necessary skills and cost too much, according to a Gallup survey last year. Meanwhile, the cost of attending college is growing. Adjusted for inflation, average tuition is up 30-40% over the past 20 years at public and private colleges, according to data gathered by U.S. News and World Report. While Mitchell agrees with some of the Trump administration's criticisms of higher education, the way the federal government has addressed those concerns — such as cutting off federal funding for research — is overblown, he said. 'His actions have been outrageous and dangerous and missed the point,' Mitchell said. A Department of Education spokesperson didn't respond to requests for comment for this story. A leading complaint: Colleges are too liberal The belief that college campuses have become bastions of a leftist ideology where conservatives are underrepresented has been a central feature in Trump's critiques of higher education. In an April letter to Harvard, the Trump administration demanded numerous reforms to campus admissions, hiring and management practices. The administration said Harvard must review programs and departments that 'fuel antisemitic harassment' and make changes to expand ideological diversity on campus. Among Americans dissatisfied with higher education, 41% believe colleges push a political agenda, Gallup's poll last year showed. It was the top issue, followed at 37% by those who said colleges focus on the wrong things and don't teach relevant skills. Those respondents were more than three times as likely to believe colleges were too liberal than too conservative. Read more: Here are 5 of the biggest effects on higher ed in the 'Big Beautiful Bill' Any 'clear-minded observer of higher education' would agree that academia has skewed further to the left, Mitchell said. 'Viewpoint diversity is always at risk in every discipline and it really comes home when departments become homogenous around any set of ideas,' he said. For instance, Mitchell said there are too few conservative academics championing free-market capitalism in economics departments and that there is excessive emphasis in the humanities on anticolonialism, a political and social movement seeking to end colonial rule across the globe. Robert Shibley, special counsel for campus advocacy for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, or FIRE, raised similar concerns about the lack of political diversity in higher education. 'It's a perennial complaint and I think lies behind a lot of the animosity toward Harvard and other schools,' he said. The nonpartisan free speech group based in Washington, D.C., has urged colleges and universities in recent years to take those concerns seriously. Yet adjusting the ideological diversity on campus is outside the government's purview, not to mention a tricky endeavor, Shibley said. For one, 'You can't just wave a wand' and generate 'a whole bunch of conservative academics waiting in the wings.' Academia may be politically left of the American public, yet in theory it should not matter, said Dr. Greg Weiner, president of Assumption University in Worcester. 'I've often said I don't know who our faculty votes for,' he said. 'For all I know, they 100% could have voted for Biden, 100% could have voted for Trump, and I would not care as long as they're excellent teachers and scholars.' But on many campuses, politics have increasingly seeped into lesson plans, he said. Read more: 'Devastating': 10 Harvard researchers detail 'essential' work set to be cut by Trump Educators would benefit from limiting 'extraneous material' from the classroom, even in subjects such as political thought — Weiner's area of expertise — with a connection to current events, he said. Doing so may help break the public perception that colleges have become overly political. 'Rather than locking into a position that would require us to persuade significant majorities of the American public that they're simply wrong, let's start by taking a hard look at ourselves,' he said. Antisemitism has been a longstanding issue In April, under intense pressure from Trump to address campus antisemitism, Harvard acknowledged it had failed to effectively combat discrimination against Jewish students and staff amid Israel's war in Gaza. Jews of varying political stripes were shunned, harassed, targeted in class discussions, and generally fearful to discuss their identity, a report released in April from a Harvard task force found. The same patterns existed on campuses across the country. Accompanying the report, Harvard President Alan Garber issued an apology: 'I am sorry for the moments when we failed to meet the high expectations we rightfully set for our community.' Antisemitism festered on campuses for years before the war began with Hamas's Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, Jewish community leaders say. Read more: Trump admin threatens Harvard's accreditation over antisemitism response Discrimination of Jews steadily swelled on college campuses through the early 2000s and 2010s as the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians deteriorated and as campus advocacy around the conflict intensified, said Steven Schimmel, the executive director of the Jewish Federation of Central Massachusetts. By the time Hamas attacked Israel, the issue had already become 'precipitously worse' than in decades prior, he said. It has since only deteriorated further. It took pressure from the White House and Congress, Jewish organizations, alumni and students for college leaders to realize that antisemitism was rapidly escalating, Schimmel said. Much like their Jewish and Israeli peers, students of Muslim, Arab and Palestinian descent were also subject to a climate of 'fear and intimidation' as campus tensions flared, another report from Harvard found. The university did too little to combat discrimination or support students on both sides of the conflict, it said. While college leaders have largely grasped the need for action and taken it, important steps are still needed, Schimmel said. Universities must enforce their antidiscrimination rules effectively. And they should ensure that broader perspectives on issues related to Israel are taught in the classroom, he said. Read more: Trump's antisemitism probe mostly relies on Harvard's own report, Harvard claims Trump has made clear that failure from Harvard to act against antisemitism could have grave consequences. 'There are plenty of members of the Jewish community who welcome the added focus of combating antisemitism,' Schimmel said. Yet there is also trepidation, he added, over what the fallout of Trump's approach could be, and whether more targeted actions to combat antisemitism would be more effective. 'Tremendous room for improvement' A college degree still presents a clear pathway to financial mobility, yet higher education has 'tremendous room' to improve free speech, counter campus antisemitism and expand the political diversity of faculty, according to Beth Akers, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning think tank. College education has been 'over-celebrated,' she said, and the Trump administration's focus on the sector feels like a 'necessary correction,' even if it goes too far with cuts to funding. Read more: 'A day of loss': Boston University to lay off 120 people citing federal funding impacts The Trump administration's critiques of colleges could spur more people to question whether to pursue a degree, Akers said. 'Getting people to be more cautious about this investment, but not dismissing it entirely, I think, is actually a good innovation,' she said. Other higher education leaders don't see as much of an upside. Lynn Pasquerella, president of the Association of American Colleges and Universities and a former president at Mount Holyoke College, said the federal government's characterization of colleges and universities is 'disconnected from the reality.' Pasquerella sees the Trump administration as taking advantage of a growing mistrust of higher education for its own political aims, such as attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion programs. At the same time, she acknowledges that the institution has its faults. 'I believe that the longstanding critiques of higher education — that it's too expensive, too difficult to access, doesn't teach students 21st century skills — need to be addressed and they need to be addressed directly,' she said. 'And it requires a reckoning around the fundamental mission and purposes of American higher education.' What that reckoning looks like, however, has yet to be realized, she said. More Higher Ed Harvard continues dismantling its DEI offices amid Trump attacks Pro-Israel website used to compile list of ICE targets, agent testifies Trump admin renews demand for Harvard foreign student info: 'We tried to do things the easy way' Trump admin threatens Harvard's accreditation over antisemitism response Here are 5 of the biggest effects on higher ed in the 'Big Beautiful Bill' Read the original article on MassLive.

Tuition increase approved for Pennsylvania state universities after 7-year freeze
Tuition increase approved for Pennsylvania state universities after 7-year freeze

CBS News

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • CBS News

Tuition increase approved for Pennsylvania state universities after 7-year freeze

For the first time in seven years, the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education's board of governors voted to raise tuition, saying the increase could be rolled back if funding is increased. The increase means in-state undergraduate students at universities like Slippery Rock, IUP, WCU or Kutztown would pay an extra $139 per semester, bringing tuition to just under $8,000 a year. The board said setting tuition now with the option to revisit gives clarity to students for the upcoming semester and flexibility to lawmakers during budget negotiations. To maintain flat tuition, the board is asking the state for a 6.5% increase in funding. "Every dollar counts for our students. If the state provides the funding we've requested, PASSHE can roll back tuition to help students with other essential expenses," PASSHE board of governors chair Dr. Cynthia Shapira said in a news release. "We hope this action gives those involved in state budget negotiations the time and flexibility they need to secure as much as possible for our students while allowing students and our universities to prepare for the fall semester." PASSHE hasn't approved an increase in tuition since 2018. The board said if tuition had kept pace with inflation, students would be paying nearly 28% more. Last year, more than 80,000 students were enrolled at state universities. The board was required to set tuition this week. While the deadline for the budget was June 30, Pennsylvania's politically divided Legislature is still negotiating.

Record 8,000 US students have applied to UK universities amid Trump's college crackdown
Record 8,000 US students have applied to UK universities amid Trump's college crackdown

The Independent

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • The Independent

Record 8,000 US students have applied to UK universities amid Trump's college crackdown

American students are applying for U.K. universities in record numbers amid Donald Trump 's college crackdown during his first few months in office. The Trump administration has intervened in higher education, pressuring states, colleges, and universities to abandon diversity, equity, and inclusion programs while attempting to dictate curriculum. The president has also launched high-profile battles against institutions such as Harvard University, freezing billions of dollars in federal funding over alleged liberal bias and antisemitism and threatening their tax-exempt status. All of that appears to be driving American students across the Atlantic, with new figures from the U.K.'s university admissions service, UCAS, showing 7,930 applications from American students for the fall 2025 semester. It marks a nearly 14 percent rise on the previous year and the highest total since records began in 2006. The total number of U.S. students paying deposits to secure places on UK courses is up 19 percent compared to this time last year, according to Enroly. St Andrew's University is home to around ten percent of Americans studying at UK institutions. The prestigious university, which has educated the Prince and Princess of Wales, reported a 14 percent increase in applications, according to the Financial Times. Cara Skikne of Studyportals, a higher education data provider, said increased concern over campus freedoms had pushed more U.S. students to consider degrees abroad. 'Global universities are increasingly competing to attract students who feel unwelcome in the US, and at the moment that includes many of its domestic students,' she told the FT. Studyportals analysed student searches on its website to highlight another concerning trend: U.S. universities are losing their appeal to international students. Research published in June showed that pageviews for U.S. courses fell by 50 percent in the first quarter of the year, marking a post-Covid-19 pandemic low. Despite Trump's more restrictive approach to student visas and immigration policies, Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the U.S. remains a welcoming place for British students. Last month, McMahon told The Times that she would like to continue 'to encourage' British students 'to come here and study'.

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