The big picture: Enrolment targets
Transcription
The big picture: Enrolment targets
The Landscape for International Undergraduate Recruitment at UBC Karen McKellin International Student Initiative April 27, 2015 International Student Initiative • Established by Board of Governors in 1996 • Recruits full-fee paying international undergraduates • Serves faculties at UBC V, UBC O; reports to the Provost each campus • Supports recruitment for Vantage, other entry/bridging programs, visiting and sponsored students • Works closely with the faculties and undergraduate admissions on strategic setting of international targets commensurate with capacity, admission standards, budgetary considerations, and market considerations • Manages international student financial assistance funding to strategically support recruitment and retention ISI’s recruitment infrastructure • Recruitment teams based on both campuses • Teams aligned for regional focus under a Director • • • • • Asia & Europe (A & E) • Americas, Middle East, & Africa (AMEA) Established relationships with broad network of international feeder schools eRecruitment (on-line webinars, chats) the new frontier On-campus recruitment: student/counselor fam tours, weekly campus tours Remote recruiters: • Asia Pacific Regional Office (1.8 fte); India; the UK; United Arab Emirates; • Kenya and Indonesia (planned) • Dedicated marketing and communications unit; you.ubc.ca site attracts 3 M unique visitors/year; active on all major social media channels. • New strategic partnerships capability – sponsors and third-party recruitment agents Three international undergraduate recruitment goals Scale – find enough students to meet each faculty’s annual international enrolment targets Quality – find students who can meet program admission requirements and English language admission standard Diversity – find students from a variety of source countries; find students for our international needs-based scholars program UBC Vancouver international enrolment in undergraduate degree programs 2008-2015 (head count) 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Projected UBC Okanagan international enrolment in undergraduate degree programs 2008 to 2015 (head count) 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Projected Comparison with Canadian peers Winter 2014 UBC International undergraduates (all degree + non-degree) 8,506 Total undergraduates 49,034 International as % of total undergrads 17% Top five source countries 1 China 2,786 2 USA 865 3 S Korea 456 4 Japan 325 5 India 266 Toronto McGill 10,276 67,926 5,882 21,153 15% 22% China 5,379 USA 1,741 S Korea 583 France 1,330 India 390 China 797 USA Hong Kong (China SAR) 281 S Korea 173 271 Pakistan 168 TOP N. AMERICA DOCTORATE-GRANTING UNIVERSITIES HOSTING INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS, 2013/14 Institution University of Toronto University of British Columbia New York University University of Southern California University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign Columbia University Purdue University - Main Campus University of California - Los Angeles McGill University Northeastern University Arizona State University Michigan State University University of Washington University of Michigan - Ann Arbor Boston University Penn State University - University Park Ohio State University - Main Campus Indiana University - Bloomington Total Int'l Students 12,607 11,965 11,164 10,932 10,843 10,486 9,988 9,579 9,531 9,078 8,683 7,704 7,469 7,273 7,143 7,024 6,800 6,661 Global economic, political and demographic push-pull factors • International education a growth industry • 4.5 million students on the move in 2013/14 – growth will be sustained until 2024 • China – currently #1 source of students worldwide but growth is slowing • India – steady growth; poised to overtake China by 2024 • Hyper competitive • US, UK, Australia, Germany, Canada, and now China vying to grow their market share • General perception that US and UK offer higher quality of education than Canada • World economy improving • Recovery from recession – set back by falling oil prices • US jobs growth • Canadian dollar down – a boon for Canadian exports • Political factors • Lingering turmoil in Middle East • US presidential elections • Changing Canadian student visa policies Competitive advantages and disadvantages UBC advantages Challenges • Faculty-driven strategic international enrolment management • Bulk of international tuitions flow back to the faculties • Largest pool of dedicated financial assistance funds in Canada and one of three Canadian partners for MasterCard Foundation Scholarships • Canadian student visa policies and right to work 3 years post-graduation • Experienced and focused international recruitment team and worldwide network of feeder schools • Commitment to provision of international student services (eg., JumpStart) • UBC moving to benchmarked tuition fees – will no longer have a price advantage • Maintaining quality in order to maintain ranking and brand • Maintaining diversity; risk of too great dependence on one or two source countries • Changing Canadian immigration rules less friendly to international students who may want to stay in Canada • Proliferation of programs geared to an international consumer– marketing and recruitment can become balkanized • No systematic tracking of international student outcomes post-graduation and systematic cultivation of loyal alumni
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