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Canadian Universities Are Increasingly Setting Their Sights on Attracting International Students

More news stories on Canada

Joanne Laucius and Mike Barber, Canwest News Service, September 23, 2009

Across Canada, universities are under pressure to grow, but with stagnating or dwindling numbers of high school graduates at home, schools are increasingly looking overseas.

The selling point is Canada’s cost competitiveness compared to similar institutions in the United States, Britain and Australia.

For instance, in Ottawa one out of every 10 Carleton University undergraduates settling into the new school year is from outside of Canada. For graduate students, the ratio is closer to one in five.

And, if the university meets its strategic target, within five years, 13 per cent of all undergraduates will be international students.

Mourad Soliman, 19, who was accepted at universities in Kuwait and Egypt, decided on Carleton after he met a recruiter at a universities fair in Kuwait.

Now in his second year of communications engineering, Soliman considers his decision a good investment.

“When you see a chance like this, you seize the chance right away,” he said. “It might be a bit expensive, but it will provide a better life.”

In 2008, 95,414 foreign students were enrolled in Canadian universities, nearly double the amount from a decade before, according to statistics from Citizenship and Immigration Canada.

Of those students, the bulk settled in Canada’s major urban centres—one in five in both Toronto and Vancouver, about 12 per cent in Montreal, and another three per cent in each of Ottawa, Edmonton, and Calgary.

Between 1992 and 2007, the number of degrees, diplomas and certificates awarded to Canadian students increased 186 per cent, according to Statistics Canada.

In that same period, the number granted to international students increased by 343 per cent, the agency said.

China is the largest exporter of students, but Hong Kong, India, Vietnam and Malaysia are also considered strong markets, as are countries in the Middle East.

Pari Johnston, director of international relations with the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada, said foreign students are attracted to studying here for a number of reasons.

“Our tuition fees are certainly very competitive if not lower than those in the United Kingdom and the United States,” she said. “In general, it’s a secure, safe environment, across cities and rural communities, to study in.”

In some case, universities are even establishing campuses overseas.

According to a recent report from the London-based Observatory on Borderless Higher Education, there are now 162 international branch campuses around the world, a 43-per-cent increase in three years.

The United Arab Emirates alone is host to 40 branch campuses.

Carleton has offered MBAs in Tehran and Shanghai for a decade. Just a few weeks ago, the University of Waterloo opened a campus in Dubai to 22 engineering students.

The University of Ottawa is negotiating a similar agreement with a university in Egypt. Meanwhile, it is also building links to high schools and post-secondary institutions in China, Africa and the Middle East.

But increasingly, international students argue they are being used as cash cows to fund Canada’s universities.

While fee increases for domestic students are regulated, international fees are not.

At Carleton, international students bring in $15,000 to $17,000 a year in tuition, more than twice what their domestic counterparts pay.

“Lots of people have parents who are working their tails off to pay,” said Kimalee Phillip, president of Carleton’s Graduate Students’ Association and a native of Grenada. Phillip said she is carrying about $45,000 in debt.

Mark Langer, president of the 15,000-member Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations, has concerns about foreign students and how offshore campuses are funded.

“Where is startup money coming from? Is it coming out of operating costs in the hopes that they will be very profitable? These are speculative ventures,” said Langer, a film professor at Carleton University. “This isn’t a public service. This is an investment. It has to produce cash results for the university.”

Original article

(Posted on September 29, 2009)

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Comments

1 — James Bond wrote at 6:48 PM on September 29:

What this news story does not tell you is that 3/4’s of all Chineese students stay in Canada after they finish school. Alot of these so-called students then go to the USA.
..How many white students grow up wishing to study in China,India or some other non-white country….?….very few.

2 — Whiteplight wrote at 7:18 PM on September 29:

Canada seems to be attempting to copy the American model of Ivy Leaque schools “going rogue.” That is, they are no longer Ivy Leaque schools but diploma factories for non-white foreigners. They make sure that there are plenty of beautiful, liberal, white women on campuses too, so that the attraction to a “higher education” is complete. It’s all about money, folks.

3 — Anonymous wrote at 4:55 AM on September 30:

I am Canadian and see a huge increase in blacks and other foreigners in our secondary schools.

The college and university leaders are amongst the worst race traitors.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 5:29 AM on September 30:

“3/4’s of all Chineese students stay in Canada after they finish school”.

Those are probably just the documented cases. ‘Overstaying’ one’s visa to the tune of 20 years or more while buying a home, starting a business, and having a drivers license, all the while feeling indignant and superior to ‘racist’ whitey and America is a lifestyle all it’s own.

5 — Jupiter wrote at 12:26 PM on September 30:

There is no justification for the massive replacement of European peoples in their Nations. There is zero benefit to the majority European populations of Canada and America. There is no demographic,cultural,linguistic and econmic justification for massive race replacement. How could Euro-Canadians and Euro-Americans-Native Born White Americans-possibly be better off being made an ever dwindling racial minority within their own nations? Complete nonsense. Economic growthamania requires the the reduction of White Canadians and White Americans to an ever dwindling racial minority within their own nations. For this reason alone it should be completely rejected. The corporations, the CEOs of these corporations the economic model model that they operate by are evil. Reject this evil. It is all about the genocide of White Canadians and White Americans. WE are under no obligation to commit race suicide to please the hispanic “american” Soledade O’Brian-affirmative action admission to Harvard and married to an investment banker - and the anti-white kenyan bigot Barack HUSSIEN Obama.

6 — Fed Up wrote at 4:24 PM on September 30:

I’d venture to guess that Canada is simply incapable of graduating very many “bright” students. But then Canada is patting itself on the back for its admission of so many third world immigrants. Is there a possible connection between those two items? I wonder… .


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