Wednesday, July 1, 2026

As international enrollment falls, U.S. students face program cuts and higher prices [ The Hechinger Report ]

The flava:
Harrison Keller was starting only his second year as president of the University of North Texas last fall when he was abruptly confronted with a big problem. 

Enrollment was down. And the source of the crisis made it much worse: In the wake of Trump administration moves to deny and revoke visas, deport international students and impose travel bans, 2,800 students from abroad who the university expected to show up had stayed away

Full-tuition-paying international students — especially graduate students, who Keller said bring $20,000 to $25,000 each to his bottom line — are critical to balancing the budget, underwriting services and keeping costs lower for their domestic classmates. 

The loss of so many of them pushed the university $45 million into the red, Keller said, forcing it to eliminate 71 academic programs. And a continuing decline in the number of international students will mean a hit of another $47 million in lost revenue in the next academic year, according to university budget projections. . . .   

The article:

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