The
UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA College of International Studies
International Profile 2011 Presented by
The College of International Studies
Message from the Dean of the College of International Studies
INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA INTERNATIONAL PROFILE 2011 It gives me great pleasure to present the University of Oklahoma’s first international statistical profile. The following report breaks down the numbers of OU students going overseas for academic credit and highlights the University’s diverse international student population. We hope to make this an annual review so that data can be compared over the course of many years to spot trends and seek improvement when necessary. OU has the great fortune of having leadership that believes strongly in the internationalization of higher education. President Boren has challenged the University to double the number of students seeking credit overseas by 2014. The good news is that OU students are studying abroad in increasing numbers. The total number of program participants jumped 28% (from 646 to 830) since President Boren issued his call for greater student numbers. This growth is remarkable given the economic climate of the past three years. Getting 1300 students to earn credit abroad by 2014, however, will be a challenge. The rise in student numbers over the past three years is due to many factors. The work of individual Colleges has certainly been a driving force. Specific faculty-led summer programs, designed at the College level, are meeting the curricular needs of students while also providing an academically sound study abroad experience. President Boren’s increase in the Presidential International Travel Fellowships, (PITF) along with a general emphasis on study abroad scholarships, have also helped students offset costs during the difficult economic times of the past three years. The addition of OU’s first signature study abroad program in Arezzo, Italy has also been an area of rapid growth. This year nearly one out of five students who earn credit abroad will pass through Arezzo. There remains, however, much to work on in the months ahead. First, OU students should be encouraged to experience more non-European study abroad destinations. While this preference for Europe as a study abroad destination is not uncommon among American college students across the country, OU ought to continue to emphasize programs that introduce Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America to our students. Second, too many students are still returning from semester or yearlong programs with complaints about housing, academic quality and administrative help. We will continue to review our partner universities and expand the successful relationships and curtail others that don’t meet OU student expectations. Third, while individual colleges have significant autonomy over their own programs, the Office of Education Abroad (EA) remains essential to the OU study abroad experience. Pre-departure orientations and approvals, medical insurance and contact registration with EA ensure that the University is ready in the case of an emergency. When the tsunami/earthquake/nuclear disaster in Japan took place in March 2011, EA had contacted OU students in the country within 12 hours and ensured their safe return to the United States. The Office of International Student Services (ISS) continues to play a quiet, but critical role advising OU’s 2000+ international students and their dependents on matters directly related to their US immigration status. ISS has a mandate to protect the immigration status of international students while helping them obtain the maximum allowable benefits under the law. By issuing Forms I-20 and DS-2019 in support of F-1 and J-1 visa applications, in cooperation with OU Admissions and the Center for English as a Second Language (CESL), ISS provides valuable consular support and information. ISS also administers OU’s Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) to ensure compliance with federal laws and regulations. The importance of SEVIS compliance cannot be stressed enough. High profile incidents involving international students on college campuses were in the news again in 2011.1
OU enrolls students from 120 countries and processes visas for degree- and non-degree seeking international students, including the Center for English as a Second Language (CESL) and students on practical training in the U.S. The total numbers of international students at OU have also risen dramatically in the past three years. The total numbers of enrolled international students are up 25% from the spring 2009 semester (1381 to 1736). The top three countries of international student representation at OU are China, India and South Korea. This top three mirrors national trends. The top three colleges enrolling the largest number of international students at OU are the College of Engineering, College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Earth and Energy. Fifty-four percent of OU’s international students are at the graduate level. For the first time in 2011, ISS has a dedicated staff member for sponsored international students. Patterned after UT-Austin and OSU’s sponsored student program, the new position is paid for via fees from the sponsoring institutions. While there are only 169 sponsored international students at OU (the Saudi Arabian Cultural Mission leads with 40 sponsored students), we see this area as a possible place of growth in years to come. While Education Abroad and International Student Services falls under the administrative wing of the new College of International Studies, these units serve the University at large. The work they do is vitally important for the internationalization of OU and the successes of the past year is due in no small measure to excellent staff work. My gratitude for the outstanding work of ISS Director Monica Sharp, and the ISS staff: Mariana Mircheva, Sheena Connell, Brenda Chaney, Robyn Stewart, Sarah Dysart, Caroline MacLeod and Alexis Taitel. I extend similar appreciation to Education Abroad Director Alice Kloker and the EA staff: Kristian Savic, Kye LeBoeuf and Tina Henderson. Finally, my special thanks to Jacque Braun, the Marketing and PR Specialist in the College of International Studies, who put this document together under a tight deadline and with creativity and imagination as always. Zach Messitte Dean, College of International Studies William J. Crowe Chair in Geopolitics
1 See
the account of an international student studying chemical engineering at South Plains College near Lubbock, Texas who was arrested for plotting to bomb former President George W. Bush’s home in Dallas. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/ id/41758705/ns/us_news-security/t/student-accused-plotting-bomb-bush-home/
Message from the Dean of the College of International Studies
INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA INTERNATIONAL PROFILE 2011
OU in Arezzo Director Kirk Duclaux poses with a group of OU students in Florence during the 2010 fall semester.
International students at the 2010 Eve of Nations
Cherrie Warden and Marissa Alberty (‘09) Cape Town, South Africs
2010 Eve of Nations
INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA INTERNATIONAL PROFILE 2011
TABLE OF CONTENTS
2
EDUCATION ABROAD HIGHLIGHTS Alice Kloker, Director, Education Abroad Alice is from Minneapolis, Minnesota where she developed an interest in international affairs at an early age as a summer camper at the Concordia Language Villages and later as a student of German and Russian at her public high school. Her undergraduate degree in political science from Grinnell College included a semester abroad in Mexico and Guatemala. After college, Alice lived first on the US/Mexico border working with asylum seekers in El Paso, Texas and then in an Andean community in Peru with a local non-governmental human rights organization. She received an M.A. in political science and feminist studies from the University of Minnesota in 2002, and then worked at the Center for Global Education at Augsburg College until she moved to Oklahoma and began working in Education Abroad in 2007 as a study abroad adviser for summer programs. Education Abroad Mission: to provide University of Oklahoma students with safe, academically relevant and personally transformative study abroad opportunities across the world.
EDUCATION ABROAD
Education Abroad Services: • Study Abroad Advising • International Student Exchanges • Program Development and Assessment • Risk Management and Health & Safety Oversight • Faculty Training • Campus Resource for Internationalization Efforts • Information Hub for Approved Study Abroad Programs • Liaison for Curricular Integration Efforts Types of Study Abroad Programs • Reciprocal Exchanges • Direct Enrollment • Faculty Led • International Education Organizations • OU in Arezzo Summary of Reported Study Abroad Participation:
Academic Year
Fall Semester
Spring Semester
Summer
Other
Total Number of Students
Total number of program par;cipants
2008-‐2009
32
39
111
427
37
640
646
2009-‐2010
37
32
130
443
53
687
695
2010-‐2011
28
63
138
539
63
811
830
H v
including May and August intersession including spring break and winter intersession
The number of students participating in an approved, registered for-credit study abroad program increased by 18% from 2009 - 2010.
3
TOP DESTINATIONS FOR OU STUDENTS ABROAD 173 147 120
111
65
29
28
21
United Kingdom Italy France Spain China Costa Rica Germany Peru
GENDER Of the 811 students who went abroad in 2010 - 2011, 61% were women, and 39% were men.
319
Female
Journalism senior Lilly Chapa and Aviation junior Niki Bray representing Sooner Nation at the Ollantaytambo ruins in Peru
EDUCATION ABROAD
492
Male
4
RACE AND ETHNICITY OF OU STUDENTS ABROAD 2010 - 2011 2%
5% 4%
American Indian/Alaska Na8ve (32)
6% 3%
Asian/Pacific Islander (45)
5%
Black/African American (27) Hispanic/La8no(a) (38) White/European American (621) Other (19) No Answer (41)
75%
EDUCATION ABROAD
ACADEMIC LEVEL OF PARTICIPANTS
2010 - 2011
Graduate (33) 4% First Year (72) 9% Senior (188) 23%
Junior (331) 41%
Sophomore (187) 23%
EDUCATION ABROAD ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGE 2010 - 2011 College
5
Total Reponses
College of Arts & Sciences
274
Michael F. Price College of Business
232
College of Interna>onal Studies
79
Gaylord College of Journalism & Mass Communica>on
68
College of Engineering
60
College of Law
33
University College
30
Weizenhoffer College of Fine Arts
17
Jeannine Rainbolt College of Educa>on
12
College of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences
9
Mewbourne College of Earth & Energy
9
College of Con>nuing Educa>on
4
Graduate College
3
College of Architecture
2
OU Health Sciences Center
2 834
Kristen Hansen (‘10, Arlington, TX) with children in Colombia during a study abroad experience.
EDUCATION ABROAD
Total
6
PROGRAM TYPES 2010 - 2011 While 811 OU students participated on an approved, credit-bearing study abroad experience tracked by the Office of Education Abroad, there were 19 students who participated in two programs during the 2010-2011 reporting cycle.
Type of Program
Number of Participants 189 55 394
Percentage of Participants 23% 7% 47%
Reciprocal Exchange Direct Enrollment Faculty Led (not including programs to Arezzo) International Educa- 49 tion Organization OU in Arezzo (in143 cludes Faculty Led programs to Arezzo)
6% 17%
Par,cipants by Program Type
EDUCATION ABROAD
Reciprocal Exchange
17%
Direct Enrollment
Faculty Led (not including programs to Arezzo)
6% 7%
Interna,onal Educa,on Organiza,on OU in Arezzo (includes Faculty Led programs to Arezzo)
23%
47%
ENROLLMENT IN EDUCATION ABROAD PROGRAMS BY REGION 2010 - 2011 Academic Year
Fall Semester
Spring Semester
Summer
Other
Total
Africa
0
3
3
19
0
25
Asia
2
12
11
51
23
99
Europe (including Turkey)
26
38
113
431
11
619
Latin America
0
9
9
34
29
81
Oceanina
0
0
2
0
0
2
EDUCATION ABROAD
Lauren Jones, Corie White, Nicole Brown, and Lesley Martin at Machu Picchu in Peru.
7
8
ENROLLMENT IN EDUCATION ABROAD PROGRAMS BY REGION AND COUNTRY 2010- 2011 811 Total Students 830 Total Program Participants 19 students participated in 2 programs in 2010-2011 28 ON 2010 -‐2011 ACADEMIC YEAR AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
0
2 China
2 Austria 11 France 3 Germany 3 Italy 2 Russia 2 Spain 2 Turkey
0
0
0
63 ON FALL 2010 SEMESTER AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
3 South Africa
8 Japan 2 South Korea 1 Taiwan
5 France 11 Italy 1 Norway 4 Spain 1 Turkey 16 UK
7 Chile 1 Ecuador 1 Peru
0
0
EDUCATION ABROAD
138 ON SPRING 2011 SEMESTER AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
1 Senegal 2 South Africa
10 China 1 South Korea
3 Austria 1 Belgium 1 Czech Republic 2 Denmark 20 France 6 Germany 1 Iceland 26 Italy
2 Netherlands 1 Norway 2 Russia 1 Slovenia 26 Spain 1 Sweden 4 Turkey 16 UK
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
2 Costa Rica 1 Ecuador 4 Peru 2 Uruguay
2 Australia
0
2010-‐2011 Repor+ng Cycle 602 Students on Summer, Spring Break, May, August and Winter Intersession Programs and registered credit-‐bearing student research abroad AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
19 Botswana, Ghana, Togo, Morocco
74 China, India, Japan, South Korea
442 Belgium, Estonia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Ukraine, Turkey, UK
63 0 ArgenQna, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico (USA)
MIDDLE EAST 4 Israel
ENROLLMENT IN EDUCATION ABROAD PROGRAMS BY REGION AND COUNTRY 2009 - 2010
9
687 Total Students 695 Total Program Participants 8 students participated on 2 programs during reporting year 37 STUDENTS 2009 -‐ 2010 ACADEMIC YEAR AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
0
4 China 5 Japan 1 South Korea
2 Austria 6 France 3 Germany 6 Italy 2 Netherlands 3 Spain 3 UK
1 Chile 1 Peru
0
0
32 STUDENTS ON FALL 2009 SEMESTER AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
0
3 China 1 South Korea
1 Austria 1 Finland 3 France 1 Ireland 4 Italy 2 Netherlands 2 Spain 4 UK
2 Brazil 5 Chile 2 Mexico 1 Uruguay
0
0
130 ON SPRING 2010 SEMESTER ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
2 South Africa
3 China 2 South Korea
2 Austria 1 Belgium 16 France 9 Germany 28 Italy 3 Netherlands 26 Spain 1 Switzerland 3 Turkey 1 Poland 2 Russia 18 UK
3 Chile 1 Ecuador 2 Mexico 4 Peru 1 Uruguay
2 Australia
0
2009-‐2010 Repor,ng Cycle 496 Students on Summer, Spring Break, May, August and Winter Intersession Programs and registered credit-‐bearing student research abroad AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
1 Rwanda
60 China, Hong Kong, China, Japan, South Korea
369 Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, The Netherlands, Russia, Spain, Turkey, Ukraine, UK
66 Chile, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico (USA)
0
0
EDUCATION ABROAD
AFRICA
10
ENROLLMENT IN EDUCATION ABROAD PROGRAMS BY REGION AND COUNTRY 2008 - 2009 640 Total Students 646 Total Program Participants 6 students went on two programs during 2008-2009 recording cycle 32 STUDENTS ON 2008-‐2009 ACADEMIC YEAR AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
0
4 China 4 Japan
2 Austria 4 France 5 Germany 1 Italy 3 Spain 1 Turkey 2 UK
2 ArgenJna 1 Brazil 1 Chile 1 Peru
1 Australia
0
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
4 China 4 Japan
2 Austria 4 France 5 Germany 1 Italy 3 Spain 1 Turkey 2 UK
2 ArgenIna 1 Brazil 1 Chile 1 Peru
1 Australia
0
39 STUDENTS ON FALL 2008 SEMESTER AFRICA
EDUCATION ABROAD
111 STUDENTS ON SPRING 2009 SEMESTER AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
MIDDLE EAST
2 South Africa
8 China 3 Japan
2 Austria 1 Denmark 16 France 2 Germany 1 Ireland 14 Italy 3 Russia 17 Spain 2 Sweden 4 Turkey 13 UK
2 ArgenOna 1 Brazil 7 Chile 1 Costa Rica 2 Ecuador 4 Mexico 2 Peru 1 Puerto Rico
2 Australia 1 New Zealand
2008-‐2009 Repor,ng Cycle 464 Students on Summer, Spring Break, May, August and Winter Intersession Programs and registered credit-‐bearing student research abroad 39 Students on Fall 2008 Semester AFRICA
ASIA
EUROPE
LATIN AMERICA
OCEANIA
1 South Africa
80 China, India, Japan, South Korea
303 Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Russia, Spain, Turkey, Ukraine, UK
71 0 Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Peru
MIDDLE EAST 9 Jordan
COUNTRY BREAKDOWN OF 2010 -2011 REPORTING CYCLE Number of Student Participants *
United Kingdom
173
Italy
147
France
120
Spain
111
China
65
Costa Rica
29
Germany
28
Peru
21
Ireland
17
Japan
13
South Korea
12
Chile
11
Ghana
11
Hungary
11
Togo
11
Turkey
9
India
8
Puerto Rico (USA)
8
Morocco
6
Russian Federation
6
Austria
5
Mexico
5
South Africa
5
Colombia
4
Israel
4
The Netherlands
4
Australia
2
Belgium
2
Botswana
2
Denmark
2
Ecuador
2
Greece
2
Norway
2
Uruguay
2
Argentina
1
Brazil
1
Czech Republic
1
Dominican Republic
1
Estonia
1
Iceland
1
Portugal
1
Senegal
1
Slovenia
1
Sweden
1
Taiwan
1
Ukraine
1
Shannon Merchant (‘11, Plano, TX) in Istanbul, Turkey
Taylor Krebs (‘11, Bowling Green, OH) in Edinburg, UK
*Some programs went to more than one country; numbers count total program participants by country and add up to more than the total number of students who studied abroad this year.
EDUCATION ABROAD
Country
11
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
12
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES HIGHLIGHTS Monica Sharp, Director, International Student Services, PDSO/RO Monica is the Director of the OU ISS office. She also advises students, faculty and staff on student immigration regulations. Monica is fluent in Spanish and proficient in French, and has worked in the field of US immigration advocacy and assistance since 1997 in New York, Seattle, and Oklahoma. Monica has lived in Santiago de Compostela, Spain and Strasbourg, France, both times as an international student. She has also traveled widely in Europe and Latin America. Monica holds a BA in Letters and Spanish from OU, and an MA in Spanish, also from OU. She was the 2009 International Student and Scholars Liaison for NAFSA Region III, and in January 2011 began a two-year appointment on the NAFSA National Team for International Student and Scholar Services. She frequently teaches and moderates NAFSA training workshops on immigration regulations and best practices for fellow professionals in the field. NAFSA, the Association of International Educators, is the premiere professional organization for International Student Services offices nationwide. ISS Services • Advises OU’s international students and their dependents on matters directly related to their US immigration status. • Protects the immigration status of international students while working with them to obtain the maximum allowable benefits under the law. • Issues Forms I-20 and DS-2019 in support of F-1 and J-1 visa applications, in cooperation with OU Admissions and the Center for English as a Second Language (CESL), and provide consular support and information. • Administers OU’s Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) to ensure compliance with federal laws and regulations. • Provides expanded student outreach and services through Open Houses, travel signature sessions, Form Friday, on-line and in-person Workshops and International Student Speaker Series. • Liaises with colleges to raise their awareness of their own international students, issues, and need for support at the college level. ISS Highlights • In Spring 2011, the total international students population at the University of Oklahoma was 2098. This number includes enrolled degree- and non-degree seeking international students, students in the Center for English as a Second Language and students on practical training in the U.S. • OU enrolls students from 120 countries. • Top three countries with international students at OU are China, India and South Korea and these statistics are very close to the national average. • Top three colleges enrolling the largest number of international students at OU are the College of Engineering, College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Earth and Energy. • The leading major for international students at OU continues to be Petroleum Engineering. The number one major for international students in the U.S. is Business. • OU ISS has increased its staff to include one director, 4 full time advisors, one sponsored student advisor, and three supporting front staff. • International graduate degree-seeking students represent about 2/3 of the total international degree-seeking student population. • OU hosts 169 sponsored students from 25 countries representing 28 different sponsored programs. The top three countries for sponsored students are Saudi Arabia, Vietnam and Turkey. • OU ISS hired a sponsored student programs advisor in June 2011 to manage, develop and grow the sponsored student programs at OU.
13
SPRING 2011 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS Total international students New students - Spring 2011
= 2098 = 188
Top Ten Majors
Top Ten Countries of Ci.zenship Country
1
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
CHINA
307
INDIA
164
SOUTH KOREA
99
NIGERIA
93
VIETNAM
86
FRANCE
85
SAUDI ARABIA
79
COLOMBIA
56
CANADA
34
TURKEY
33
1 2 3 4 5
6 6 7 8
9
Major
# of Students
PETROLEUM ENGINEERING
194
RECIPROCAL EXCHANGE
173
ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENG
83
COMPUTER SCIENCE
78
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
49
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
46
CIVIL ENGINEERING
46
CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY
44
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
41
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
39
Raiyan Nazim (Elecrtical and Computer Engineering) from Bangladesh enjoys a Sooner Game.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
2
# of Students
14
SPRING 2011 INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ENROLLMENT GRADUATE/UNDERGRADUATE Total number of enrolled students Total number of enrolled graduate students Total number of enrolled undergraduate students
= 1736 = 939 (including exchange students) = 797 (including exchange students) Top Ten Countries of Ci.zenship Undergraduate
Top Ten Countries of Ci.zenship Graduate Country
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 8
# of Students
CHINA
215
INDIA
147
NIGERIA
42
COLOMBIA
39
FRANCE
34
SOUTH KOREA
30
TURKEY
28
VIETNAM
28
TAIWAN
25
IRAN
25
1 2 3 4 5 5 6 7 8 9
Top Ten Majors Graduate Major
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Country
# of Students
CHINA
92
SAUDI ARABIA
77
SOUTH KOREA
69
VIETNAM
58
NIGERIA
51
FRANCE
51
CANADA
25
UNITED KINGDOM
21
MEXICO
20
COLOMBIA
17
Top Ten Majors Undergraduate # of Students
ELEC AND COMPUTER ENG
83
PETROLEUM ENG
80
COMPUTER SCIENCE
70
CHEMICAL ENG
49
CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEM
42
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
39
INDUSTRIAL ENG
34
RECIPROCAL EXCHANGE GRAD
34
PHYSICS
29
CIVIL ENGINEERING
28
Major
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
# of Students
RECIPROCAL EXCHANGE
139
PETROLEUM ENGINEERING
118
FINANCE
26
ACCOUNTING
24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
22
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
20
CIVIL ENGINEERING
18
ARCHITECTURE
17
MARKETING
16
MICROBIOLOGY
15
15
INTERNATIONAL UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS PER COLLEGE SPRING 2011 Undergrad Total Int’l Undergrad
College of Architecture College of Arts & Sciences College of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences College of Engineering College of Law Gaylord College of Journalism & Mass Communication Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education Mewbourne College of Earth & Energy Michael F. Price College of Business School of International and Area Studies Weitzenhoffer College of Fine Arts University College
13 105 3 111 NA 8 3 129 88 12 9 166
430 6764 374 2036 NA 1211 872 622 2668 412 868 3146
% of Enrolled Int’l Undergraduate Students in the College 3.02% 1.55% 0.80% 5.45% NA 0.66% 0.34% 20.74% 3.30% 2.91% 1.04% 5.28%
INTERNATIONAL GRADUATE STUDENTS PER COLLEGE SPRING 2011 COLLEGE
Grad Int’l
Total Grad
College of Architecture College of Arts & Sciences College of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences College of Engineering College of Law Gaylord College of Journalism & Mass Communication Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education Mewbourne College of Earth & Energy Michael F. Price College of Business School of International and Area Studies Weitzenhoffer College of Fine Arts University College
17 262 27 326 4 9 33 138 49 3 24 NA
101 2627 142 580 539 81 788 229 339 19 210 NA
% of Enrolled Int’l Graduate Students in the College 16.83% 9.97% 19.01% 56.21% 0.74% 11.11% 4.19% 60.26% 14.45% 15.79% 11.43% NA
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
COLLEGE
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
16
TOTAL INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ENROLLMENT PER COLLEGE SPRING 2011 COLLEGE
Total Int’l
Total College
College of Architecture College of Arts & Sciences College of Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences College of Engineering College of Law Gaylord College of Journalism & Mass Communication Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education Mewbourne College of Earth & Energy Michael F. Price College of Business School of International and Area Studies Weitzenhoffer College of Fine Arts University College
30 367 30 437 4 17 36 267 137 15 33 166
531 9391 516 2616 539 1292 1660 851 3007 431 1078 3146
International students at the annual International Advisory Committee Retreat.
% of Enrolled Int’l Students in the College 5.65% 3.91% 5.81% 16.70% 0.74% 1.32% 2.17% 31.37% 4.56% 3.48% 3.06% 5.28%
17
ENROLLED INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS BY COUNTRY (120) SPRING 2011 Country of Ci+zenship
Number of Students
Country of Ci+zenship
Number of Students
307
Brazil
10
India
164
Ghana
10
South Korea
99
Libya
10
Nigeria
93
Bulgaria
8
Vietnam
86
Jamaica
7
France
85
Kazakhstan
7
Saudi Arabia
79
Morocco
7
Colombia
56
Sweden
7
Canada
34
Ukraine
7
Turkey
33
Jordan
6
Venezuela
32
Norway
6
Mexico
30
Syria
6
Taiwan
30
Australia
5
United Kingdom
29
Austria
5
Iran
28
Cote D Ivoire
5
Bangladesh
27
Egypt
5
Bolivia
23
Ethiopia
5
Germany
21
Hong Kong
5
Cameroon
20
Indonesia
5
Sri Lanka
20
Niger
5
Malaysia
19
Trinidad And Tobago
5
Thailand
19
ArgenNna
4
Nepal
18
Belgium
4
Russia
15
Gabon
4
Japan
14
T Italy
4
Lebanon
14
Serbia
4
Iraq
13
Cambodia
3
Pakistan
13
Chad
3
Peru
13
Chile
3
Kenya
12
Denmark
3
Romania
12
Israel
3
Spain
12
Kuwait
3
Angola
11
Netherlands
3
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
China
18
ENROLLED INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS BY COUNTRY (120) SPRING 2011
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
Country of Ci+zenship
Number of Students
Country of Ci+zenship
Number of Students
New Zealand
3
Honduras
1
Philippines
3
Hungary
1
Poland
3
Ireland
1
Singapore
3
Laos
1
Tanzania
3
Liberia
1
West Bank
3
Macedonia
1
Zambia
3
Mali
1
Zimbabwe
3
Moldova
1
Burma
2
Mongolia
1
Congo
2
Panama
1
Ecuador
2
Qatar
1
Guatemala
2
Rwanda
1
Lithuania
2
Saint Ki>s And Nevis
1
Malawi
2
Saint Lucia
1
Portugal
2
Sierra Leone
1
Senegal
2
Slovenia
1
Armenia
1
South Africa
1
Bahamas, The
1
Swaziland
1
Belarus
1
Switzerland
1
Belize
1
Timor-‐Leste
1
Benin
1
Togo
1
Central African Republic
1
Tunisia
1
Dominica
1
Turkmenistan
1
Georgia
1
Uzbekistan
1
Greece
1
Afghanistan
1
Grenada
1
Bermuda
1
Guinea
1
Kyrgyzstan Total number of enrolled students
1 1736
INTERNATIONAL SPONSORED STUDENTS SPRING 2011
Sponsored Program
# of students
Saudi Arabian Cultural Mission
40
Petro Vietnam
31
Saudi Aramco Services
29
IIE Graduate Fellows/Rocky Mountain IIE
11 7
West African Management Services, LLC/Sonangol (Angola)
7
Libyan Government (CBIE)
6
IIE Iraqi Scholars and Leaders Program
5
Iraqi Ministry of Higher EducaIon and ScienIfic Research
5
Turkish Ministry of EducaIon
5
Gabon Ministry of Mines, Oil and Hydrocarbons
3
KuwaiI Government
3
Roxi Petroleum
2
BOTAS Turkey
1
CONAYCT
1
Edmund Muskie (USDOS/IREX)
1
EgypIan Cultural and EducaIonal Bureau
1
IIE AMIDEAST
1
IIE ExxonMobil Libya
1
IIE Foreign Language Teaching Assistants
1
IIE Strategic Partnership and Training Development/Workforce Readiness/BP NOC
1
PEMEX (Mexico)
1
PETRONAS Malaysia
1
PTT ExploraIon
1
Qatari Embassy
1
Royal Thai Government
1
Schlumberger
1
Vietnamese EducaIon FoundaIon
1 169
Namisha Thapa (Napal) performing on the South Oval at the International Bazzaar
Society of Viernamese Students at the 2010 Eve of Nations
2010 - 2011 International Advisory Committee
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SERVICES
Turkish Petroleum CorporaIon
Total number of sponsored students
19