Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Less competition from Asian students, means less-qualified Americans get in.
Let's see, how's that work???
My child's grad stem program was, until this year, considered the best in the world.
Not the US, the WORLD.
About half the students in her cohort were from Asia.
Excluding these students means my DD's grad program is no longer be the best in the world.
Those brilliant students from Asia are enrolling in European and Canadian universities now, making European and Canadian stem programs the best in the world.
America second -- or third or fourth or fifth....
Yea!!!
Why do these brilliant students need to go overseas to make foreign programs the best of the world if they can stay home and make local programs the best.
What a dumb comment. They go overseas because of reputation. Why don’t you send your kid to the local community college so they help improve its programs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Less competition from Asian students, means less-qualified Americans get in.
Let's see, how's that work???
My child's grad stem program was, until this year, considered the best in the world.
Not the US, the WORLD.
About half the students in her cohort were from Asia.
Excluding these students means my DD's grad program is no longer be the best in the world.
Those brilliant students from Asia are enrolling in European and Canadian universities now, making European and Canadian stem programs the best in the world.
America second -- or third or fourth or fifth....
Yea!!!
Why do these brilliant students need to go overseas to make foreign programs the best of the world if they can stay home and make local programs the best.
What a dumb comment. They go overseas because of reputation. Why don’t you send your kid to the local community college so they help improve its programs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe tuition rates will start dropping for a change.
Ummm....that's not how it works. International students pay the full amount of tuition which helps keep it lower for our kids.
Wrong.
I know many Indians that go to state schools in Texas and get scholarships and help.
Stop with the chamber of commerce propaganda
Your anecdote doesn't make it wrong. This is across the board generally true that they pay full freight.
And to counter your anecdote, my kid is on a college sports team that is about half not from the US. They all pay full freight (we are not D1 so no athletic money). I know this having talked with their parents and the kids (they come to play notwithstanding that school in their own countries is significantly cheaper; many don't finish out 4 years for that reason).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
That doesn't solve the need for more doctors.
In underserved or health professional shortage areas, a large % of doctors are immigrants.
Doctors will be replaced by AI/Humanoid. Approximately 40% of the physicians and surgeon's work can be done by AI/Robots already. This is a good thing that will lead to affordable and accessible heath care for Americans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Less competition from Asian students, means less-qualified Americans get in.
Let's see, how's that work???
My child's grad stem program was, until this year, considered the best in the world.
Not the US, the WORLD.
About half the students in her cohort were from Asia.
Excluding these students means my DD's grad program is no longer be the best in the world.
Those brilliant students from Asia are enrolling in European and Canadian universities now, making European and Canadian stem programs the best in the world.
America second -- or third or fourth or fifth....
Yea!!!
Why do these brilliant students need to go overseas to make foreign programs the best of the world if they can stay home and make local programs the best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
That doesn't solve the need for more doctors.
In underserved or health professional shortage areas, a large % of doctors are immigrants.
Doctors will be replaced by AI/Humanoid. Approximately 40% of the physicians and surgeon's work can be done by AI/Robots already. This is a good thing that will lead to affordable and accessible heath care for Americans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Less competition from Asian students, means less-qualified Americans get in.
Let's see, how's that work???
My child's grad stem program was, until this year, considered the best in the world.
Not the US, the WORLD.
About half the students in her cohort were from Asia.
Excluding these students means my DD's grad program is no longer be the best in the world.
Those brilliant students from Asia are enrolling in European and Canadian universities now, making European and Canadian stem programs the best in the world.
America second -- or third or fourth or fifth....
Yea!!!
Why do these brilliant students need to go overseas to make foreign programs the best of the world if they can stay home and make local programs the best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
That doesn't solve the need for more doctors.
In underserved or health professional shortage areas, a large % of doctors are immigrants.
Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Less competition from Asian students, means less-qualified Americans get in.
Let's see, how's that work???
My child's grad stem program was, until this year, considered the best in the world.
Not the US, the WORLD.
About half the students in her cohort were from Asia.
Excluding these students means my DD's grad program is no longer be the best in the world.
Those brilliant students from Asia are enrolling in European and Canadian universities now, making European and Canadian stem programs the best in the world.
America second -- or third or fourth or fifth....
Yea!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
most univresities have more than enough room for american students. But the full-pay internationals students keep americans students paying less. expect to see private college and univrsities close, regional state univresities go onlien to save cost, and tuitions rise.
Anonymous wrote:A VC friend told me that they are looking at investing in India. So many of startups in SF are founded by Indians and many not-yet-public unicorns have Indian (or Indian American) cofounders. He was already noticing the drop in Indians applying to us universities… where does that talent go? He says every cafe in Bangalore is full of young hungry talent working on an idea. That’s where the $$ will go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More room for Americans. Awesome!
Expect tuition increases. Full pay international students offset Americans and what they pay.
Racism is expensive
Anonymous wrote:What changed to cause this big drop?