The rise of
the global university
In 2011, the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development reported that 4.3 million students were enrolled
in tertiary education outside of their home country, more than double the 2.1
million students who studied abroad in 2000, with the major host countries
continuing to be the United States, Great Britain and Australia.
While one cannot, and should not, forecast the future with certainty, it is
safe to predict that the current major players in the student mobility scheme
are likely to change in the future as new study abroad destinations emerge as a
result of government educational and economic policies.
According to a June 2014 report in The Australian, Canada, China,
Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa and the
Philippines all plan to attract more international students to their countries
in future.
The Australian also reported that China has set a target of enrolling
350,000 international students from Africa and other parts of Asia for both
long-term and short-term programmes.
Technology and a generation of students brought up in a world of technological
devices will determine not only future educational delivery methods, but will
also bring new players into the market.
The increasing availability of telephone and Internet connections will unite
students worldwide. Online education will make higher education courses
available to students who may never seek a full-time undergraduate degree, but
who want to learn from some of the best professors in the world.
Current student mobility
Every year millions of undergraduate and graduate international students leave
the boundaries of their countries to study abroad. Some of the programmes are
simple exchanges for a semester or one year. Others are full-time undergraduate
and degree programmes.
I want to focus here on the mobility patterns of students from China, India and
the African continent.
China
Unquestionably, one of the most significant worldwide developments of the past
30 years has been the economic growth of China that has helped lift more than
400 million Chinese out of poverty.
The impact on higher education has been substantial. More than 60% of Chinese
high school graduates enrol in higher education, an increase from the 20%
enrolled in colleges and universities in the 1980s. China graduates an
estimated seven million college students a year.
More than 800,000 mainland Chinese have studied abroad either on degree
programmes, study abroad semesters or short-term summer programmes. By some
estimates, by 2020 China will have 20 million potential university students.
The Chinese government provides scholarships for students to study in China. In
2010-11, 15,000 American students studied on short-term programmes in China and
an additional 11,000 studied in China for a full degree. The US Department of
State’s 100,000 Strong Initiative also supports American study in China.
India
In terms of the future potential for international students, India’s population
of 1.6 billion will surpass China’s by 2028.
Indians represent the third largest population of college students after China
and the US. There are over 500 universities in India yet the central government
estimates that the country will need to open 1,000 more universities to
accommodate future college students.
By 2015, India will have nine million potential university students. Last year
nearly 200,000 Indian students studied abroad. This represents the second
largest source of globally mobile students.
According to Dr Rahul Choudaha, chief knowledge
officer and senior director of strategic development at World Education
Services, this trend is likely to continue as an increasing number of
affluent Indian parents have the ability to fund their children’s international
education.
The Indian government, in addition to spending
substantial sums on improving Indian institutions of higher education, is
reaching around the globe to establish collaborative ventures.
Cooperation with Africa, through the creation of
the India-Africa Forum, seeks to create closer educational ties with countries
on the continent. There are more than 50,000 African students studying in
India, primarily from Ghana and Nigeria.
Ghana will house the India-Africa Institute of
Information Technology and will offer courses in software development in
collaboration with Education Consultants India.
India plans to deliver tele-education to African
students in 53 countries through a satellite and fibrotic network. This
initiative hopes to link 10,000 African students to some of India’s best
universities by 2015.
Africa
Consider the following:
- There
are one billion people in Africa, representing 15% of the world’s
population.
- 70% of
the population has cell phones.
- Six of
the world’s 10 fastest-growing economies between 2001 and 2010 were in
Africa.
- Marriott
plans to open 50 hotels in Africa by 2020.
- IBM
opened its 12th research lab in Nairobi in 2012.
- Google
is the single biggest private influence in Africa, helping governments
digitise information and make it freely available.
Writing in University World News on 15 August, Wagdy Sawahel
reported that the African Virtual University, in partnership with the African
Development Bank, was launching 29 distance and e-learning centres in 21
African countries.
The centres
will work across borders and languages with the goal of helping African
countries overcome the geographical, technological, political and financial
obstacles that often prevent African students from enrolling in higher
education.
Online Africa
is developing faster than off-line Africa. Undersea cables reaching Africa via
the Atlantic and Indian oceans, plus innovative mobile phone providers, have
raised internet speeds and slashed prices.
As economies
and societal changes improve, students from Africa will increasingly travel to
study abroad. However, the biggest market for African students may well be the
online courses and MOOCs – massive open online courses – offered by colleges
and universities throughout the world, allowing African students who cannot
afford to study abroad to take courses in their home countries.
Trends
impacting on international higher education
Worldwide technological tsunami
There will
probably be no greater impact on worldwide higher education than the full
integration of technology into educational delivery methods. The internet has
rendered geography irrelevant and digital options are changing the way higher
education is consumed.
The numbers are staggering and change daily, but it is safe to state that there
are millions of college students worldwide taking online or MOOC courses. The
jury is still out on the potential and sustainability of delivering courses
online. The business models are changing.
But the major MOOC providers, like Udacity, Coursera and edX in the US,
FutureLearn in the UK and Iversity in Germany, believe that MOOCs have the
potential to reach two billion potential learners to ‘democratise’ higher
education and build global communities.
Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel’s course on justice had 20 million views in
China and Professor Wang Defeng, of Fudan University in Shanghai, taught more
than 1,100 students in his class, “Introduction to Philosophy”.
Demand for alternative methods of delivering higher education in the future is
expected to outstrip demand for traditional methods by 6% before 2020.
Employment challenges
In 2008, the world’s economy entered a major downturn with shrinking economies
and increasing unemployment rates. In many countries around the world youth
unemployment continues to be a major problem.
Let’s examine
unemployment statistics from a few countries:
- According
to the OECD, the global unemployment rate for college graduates was 5% in
2011. (Non-college graduates had an unemployment rate of 13%.)
- According
to the Chinese Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, 50% or
three million of the 2013 Chinese college graduates were unemployed.
- In
India, one in three graduates is unemployed.
- In
South Korea, the number of ‘economically inactive’ graduates exceeded
three million for the first time last year.
Increasingly, college students and their parents are asking college officials
about the return on their financial investment in college. Worldwide
unemployment could be a game changer for many countries and for colleges and
universities in those countries.
Conclusion
Despite the challenges and changes, future trends in international higher
education will continue to witness an increase in internationally mobile
students.
I maintain that the single most transformative
trend in international higher education will be the insertion of technology
into how education is delivered in the future. More students will study
‘abroad’, but they may do so from their house, never leaving their home
country.
Technology will encourage the rise of global
universities and along with today’s global student, will determine the
educational delivery methods of the future.
Telecommunication options will become standard
collegiate practice, with students taking some classes at home, some on campus
and some in employee settings.
The balance between in-country enrolments and
offshore enrolments will shift in the direction of offshore.
As long as a middle-class continues to grow
across the globe, especially in the developing world, demand for post-secondary
education will continue to outpace supply.
Most countries will continue to seek and enrol
international students as a way to build intellectual capital and remain
competitive in a globalising world. Strategic alliances will change current
international recruitment practices.
No one country will dominate the international
student market as there will be no such thing as a ‘typical’ international
student. Students will migrate to international destinations based on several
factors, including price, visa eligibility, job opportunities and the perceived
return on the educational investment.
While neither statistics nor futurists can
predict the future with precise accuracy, I believe the current and future trends
listed in this article merit consideration and review.
* Marguerite
J Dennis has been a higher education administrator for more than 40 years,
first at St John’s University in New York; then at Georgetown University in
Washington, DC; and at Suffolk University in Boston. Dennis’ expertise includes
assisting colleges and universities in the United States and around the world
to create sustainable enrolment and retention management programmes and
designing strategic international recruitment plans. She helped found branch
campuses of Suffolk University in Dakar, Senegal and Madrid, Spain.
Regards
Pralhad Jadhav
Khaitan &
Co