Over the last six months there have been several incidents that from the outside could suggest international students are no longer welcome in the UK. First there was the Malaysian student Ashraf Haziq who was the victim of one of the most shocking videos to come out of the London riots.
More recently there was the tragic murder of Indian student Anuj Bivde in Manchester on Boxing Day. Similarly, though clearly on a lesser scale, there was the symptomatic story that came out of Plymouth last week of shop keepers banning foreign students from entering in groups.
On top of this, there is currently the perceived notion that the British government is trying to make it harder for international students to gain entry to the UK with the introduction of harsher visa laws. This and the recent incidents together make it easy to assume that there is a growing trend in Britain against international students.
Record Numbers
However, the students themselves do not seem to realise this. International student numbers have consistently risen over the last decade and figures released by UCAS last week show applications from non-EU students are up again. Despite violence, visa scare stories, and reduced university funding, international students are still flocking to the UK in record numbers. So, the question that has to be asked, is, why?
Ultimately, the answer is a simple one. Just as it always has been, students come to study in the UK simply because of the quality and reputation of the universities. For all the complaints about falling standards, Britain is still the number two destination in the world for Higher Education. Only the U.S. has more quality universities, and their international fees make ours pale in comparison.
Despite this, surely the threat of a violent, intolerant country would put prospective students off coming regardless of the quality of the institutions on offer? Well, yes, it probably would, but Britain is far from intolerant towards international students. Though clearly tragic, the recent incidents are, at the moment, very much isolated events. For every student horror story there are a thousand stories to counter it. In the last year I have met hundreds of international students, and the biggest gripes range from excessive paperwork, to confusing exam timetables. The threat of violence has not been mentioned once.
Maintaining the Balance
So students come to study in Britain because the universities are world class and the society is welcoming and tolerant. Hardly a revolutionary conclusion I think you'll agree. However, both of these hard earned reputations can very quickly be lost. All it would take is for these few isolated incidents to become a worrying trend, or for universities to make major cuts that began to affect the quality of education they offer. It has taken decades and decades to form the reputation of excellence. It would take one year of poor standards and repeated cases of violence to eradicate all this.
Thankfully, the outrage over the incidents of violence, both in the press and in the general public, shows that Britain is still very protective of visitors to the country. For now I think there is little concern over foreign students being hounded out of the country on any scale, let alone a large one. However, the continued cuts to Higher Education are clearly worrying, and the knock-on effects are obvious. Universities lose funding and therefore standards slip, meaning they are able to attract fewer international students. This loss of income means standards slip further, and even fewer students make the trip to study in the UK. The snowball can quickly gather pace, growing larger all the time.
Ultimately, for all the concerns about violence, increased fees and harsher visa restrictions, if British universities maintain their quality, they will maintain their reputation, and will continue to entice precious international students.
Follow Andy Burrows on Twitter: www.twitter.com/foreignstudents
I shall continue to listen to BBC Radio 4, and read my precious Guardian newspaper in order to keep my defences up against these wicked nasty racists who hint or perhaps even suggest that the UK cannot take the entire planet.
After all, I seldom see immigrants near my rural village and none for miles around so they cannot be that many anyway, and guess what most MPs say the same too at their dinner parties and during Bar-B-Qs on fine manicured lawns when we had to go out and find an immigrant to demonstrate to our friends what fine lefty liberals we are, and that we are of a higher social order.
"On top of this, there is currently the perceived notion that the British government is trying to make it harder for international students to gain entry to the UK with the introduction of harsher visa laws. "
Perceived you say, so its not factual.
"there was the symptomatic story that came out of Plymouth last week of shop keepers banning foreign students from entering in groups."
And yet nobody batters an eye when similar bans are placed ins hops around the Uk banning UK students.
"First there was the Malaysian student Ashraf Haziq who was the victim of one of the most shocking videos to come out of the London riots."
and
"More recently there was the tragic murder of Indian student Anuj Bivde in Manchester on Boxing Day."
While both are extremely shocking and a front to human decency what part of them being students had anything to do with their sad stories. They were both victims of opportunists who picked on them simply for the sake of picking on them. There is nothing to say that they were targeted due to being foriegn students in the UK.
Also it's worth noting that not all foreign students attend university. In Edinburgh, where I live, there are around 12 language schools that attract mostly Spanish, Italian, Saudi and Russian students. These students bring in a lot of revenue to the city as they generally arrive with the money for their stay and spend it here. The sector is struggling though with the world recession and also a new rule that the government has brought in which states that all ex-EU students must have a basic level of English before they come here and have to prove it. Basically, if you're a beginner you won't be allowed into the UK. What I've seen and heard is that the Saudis and Russians, who generally have money to spend, are deciding it's not worth the bother and are going to the U.S. or Australia instead.
Russians come to the UK only because of the perceived association between Britishness and "success", "being rich" and "being cool". That's all.
English is not the hardest language on earth (apart from reading rules). You do not have to spend thousands £££ to learn it in the UK. It can be learned in Russia.... with equal success rate.
It is not the excellent standards of education that attracts students here.
What attracts Russians here is this notion of "Britishness", which is in a complex and highly poetic Russian mind firmly associated with Beatles, Diana, Piccadilly, Hyde park, Sherlock Holmes, rainy weather, gentlemen and ladies, but also with the new Russian rich who found their "second home" here.