Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. That’s my fear. Why should they accept US students if we are denying them?
I just returned with my spouse and DD, a rising HS senior, from the UK, where we toured four highly ranked universities (not Oxford or Cambridge). The admissions counselors and others we met with were very welcoming and made a point to say that they hoped to attract/enroll more qualified U.S. students. I got the impression this is not just because of the higher tuition, but because they want to diversify their international student bodies which are dominated by students from China, India, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously I have an opinion about it. But I am genuinely worried it’s going to affect my kid’s plans, which she has worked hard for and went into our planning for college. I am wondering if other parents of kids currently in college are concerned about this.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. That’s my fear. Why should they accept US students if we are denying them?
Anonymous wrote:A semester or year abroad academic exchange program is very different from matriculation as a student in a foreign country earning a degree from that foreign school.
In the former case, the student is earning the degree from a US school that the student attends and that achool is hosting the exchange program.