Trump's travel bans spook some students,
fan fears of broader chill
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[May 16, 2017]
By Ann Saphir
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Ramin Forouzandeh
had applied to 13 PhD economics programs in the United States, but after
President Donald Trump signed his first travel ban in January, the
25-year-old Iranian turned to Canada for other options.
He said he had focused on U.S. schools because they hosted most of the
world's top 20 economics programs. "Before the travel ban, I never
really considered other alternatives."
By late March, U.S. courts had halted two versions of Trump’s travel
ban, yet Forouzandeh signed for University of Toronto's Rotman School of
Management and turned down the University of Minnesota's prestigious PhD
program.
His countryman, Mahdi Ebrahimi Kahou, 30, was well into his first year
of the Minnesota program when he decided to transfer to the University
of British Columbia because of Trump's executive orders that banned
travel from seven and later six Muslim-majority countries, including
Iran.
"I lost my motivation to work completely," he said.
A Reuters survey of 19 Canadian universities showed a spike in
international applications, most notably from Iran and India. Five top
Canadian economics and business PhD programs are getting at least half
of their new Iranian students this fall because of the ban, based on
interviews with universities and students. Most of those, like
Forouzandeh and Ebrahimi Kahou, are opting out of U.S. programs in a
field where the United States both dominates and relies on foreign
talent.
While those programs represent only one field and a fraction of the U.S.
student population, they offer early evidence of the direct impact of
Trump administration policies. Academics fear they may also be a sign of
things to come if the chilling effect of Trump's "America First" agenda
spreads beyond any specific field of study or nationality.
BEST AND BRIGHTEST
"This strikes at the heart of what has made U.S. higher education the
envy of the world," said Mary Sue Coleman, chair of the Association of
American Universities. "It's this notion that the U.S. is no longer a
welcoming place for the best and the brightest."
Iranians are by far the biggest group among students directly affected
by the bans and form a small but notable part of the talent pool in
areas such as engineering and economics, where U.S. academic
institutions excel. Iranians ranked sixth last year among international
students enrolled in U.S. graduate programs, according to the Institute
of International Education.
A survey conducted jointly by five U.S. higher education associations in
February showed 38 percent of U.S. colleges reporting a drop in foreign
applications, with those from the Middle East down the most, while 27
percent saw no change - a significant cool-down after nearly a decade of
steady growth.
In 2015, at least 35 percent of graduate students at U.S. universities
granting graduate degrees in science, engineering and health were
foreigners, according to the National Science Foundation.
(For a graphic on U.S. universities, global brains, click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2qLARio )
This year, about 60 percent of graduating PhDs from the top 10 U.S.
economics departments come from other countries, a Reuters analysis
shows.
“You’ve got an issued order that’s been temporarily blocked that applies
to six countries. But the destabilization of the whole situation for
international students and faculty could not be overstated,” said Rice
University President David Leebron.
He said that for foreign students everything from getting a visa on time
to employment opportunities had been thrown into question.
According to Rice's dean of graduate and postdoctoral studies, this
year's PhD programs will have slightly fewer Chinese, Indian and Middle
Eastern students than expected. More Iranian students declined offers of
admission than usual, with several saying that they decided to study in
another country because of concerns about getting a U.S. visa.
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Iranian graduate student Ramin Forouzandeh seen in this handout
photo received May 10, 2017. Ramin Forouzandeh/Handout via REUTERS
There is no evidence of a mass exodus of foreigners - indeed, Rice
will have more students than expected from Europe and Latin America,
offsetting declines elsewhere - but academics cite dozens of
examples where Trump's policies had an impact.
At Arizona State University, for example, Iranians would typically
make up a fourth of the economics PhD program, but there will be
none in the incoming class this fall. Of those already enrolled, two
are moving to Canada. One student who visited his family in Iran
over the Christmas break still has not been able to return, leaving
the university scrambling to cover the classes he was supposed to
teach.
“The effects of this are big,” said Gustavo Ventura, ASU's economics
department chair. “These people, not just the ones that come to us -
anyone who comes to a PhD program abroad - are the cream of their
student population."
The University of Illinois now has 10 Iranians in its PhD program,
and while it’s not certain why, none of the Iranians whom it offered
admission are among the 22 students from 11 countries entering in
the fall.
At Indiana University's economics program, three Iranians withdrew
their applications almost immediately after the travel ban, said
Todd Walker, director of the department's graduate studies. "We also
had many more international applicants turn us down this year
relative to the last three years," he said. "I cannot say
definitively how much of this is attributable to the travel ban, but
I suspect it played a role."
In British Columbia, the Simon Fraser University has admitted 20
percent more international students for the fall term, according to
Associate Dean Jeff Derksen. He said queries he had received and an
online survey suggested more graduate students were considering
alternatives to U.S. programs.
"This indicates that the international map of academic knowledge
production has changed."
The prestige of the U.S. programs remains a big draw, but those
committed to a U.S. career are more aware of risks.
For example, Soheil Ghili, who is getting a PhD in economics from
Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management this month
and will start as a post-doctoral fellow at Yale this summer, is
hedging his bets.
"Let me put it this way: I will be more careful to not miss
networking opportunities with people from Toronto and London."
(With reporting by Solarina Ho and Alastair Sharp in Toronto and
Yeganeh Torbati in Washington; Editing by Peter Henderson and Tomasz
Janowski)
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