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"Foreign Students Need Not Apply"
By Catherine Stimpson
LA Times
August 27, 2003
The Sept. 11 attacks
rightly marshaled America against terrorism. Unfortunately, however, the government's
zeal has created one of the most serious conflicts between security and freedom
in our nation's history -- and its effects will be evident on college campuses,
among other places, this fall.
As a New York University educator, I am unusually
anxious about the start of this academic year. Many of my international students
-- who constitute about one-third of my student body at the Graduate School
of Arts and Science -- still do not know whether they are going to be able
to enroll next month. The reason for this uncertainty is the current policies
toward international students.
There are about 600,000 international students
in the United States; in fall 2002, my university had 4,600 enrolled. The young
men and women seeking an education at top-tier schools do not whimsically decide
to come to American shores; they want to be chemists, mathematicians, economists,
historians, literary and film scholars, and they want to learn from the best
in the world. As with any other highly competitive graduate school, we strenuously
vet their applications.
Once admitted, new students must apply for a visa.
Fair enough. But in May 2003, the State Department told all U.S. embassies
and consular offices that nearly all visa applicants were to have in-person
interviews in their home countries. Overextended embassies and consulates were
given no new resources to perform this task. The State Department did respond
to requests from the higher education community to give priority in scheduling
interviews to foreign students over others applying for visas. In some cases,
though, these interviews are scheduled so late as to make it impossible for
students to enroll, even if granted a visa.
Student reports about these interviews
stress their brevity, and some of our most talented applicants have been rejected
after five minutes or less of questioning, with no indication as to why. In
many cases, potential interviewers have a list of terms to identify students
whose academic work might involve "sensitive" or "potentially dangerous" technologies.
Words like biochemistry, robotics, biomedical engineering, artificial intelligence
and neural networks might send a student's file to Washington for a Security
Advisory Review, ensuring at the very least a substantial delay.
Clogging up
the bureaucracy even more has been a computerized, centralized database instituted
after 9/11 -- the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System, or SEVIS
-- maintained by a division of the Department of Homeland Security. All students
already here must have up-to-date information about their location and academic
standing on SEVIS or risk being deported. Ironically, there is not yet a comparable
tracking of tourists, although a tourist is theoretically as capable of terrorism
as a master's-degree candidate.
In a few years, SEVIS may be a paragon of high-tech
efficiency, but it is now notorious for its inefficiencies and mistakes. These
flaws would be laughable if a student's education were not on the line. Universities
are supposed to be part of a three-part tracking system that begins with the
State Department and the border inspectors entering information that is confirmed
when students arrive at their designated schools. In many cases, we're finding
none of this information in the system, forcing our administrators to start
from scratch or engage in "policing" without the facts, let alone the expertise.
State Department officials have also seen fit to question our admissions
processes, informing one student that she wasn't smart enough to attend NYU
and another
that he wasn't qualified for the program he had been admitted to.
We believe
that as a result of such tactics, visas for more of our students have been
denied this year than ever before. Our international students are at the
heart of our nation's scientific and technological future. Forty-one percent
of engineering
graduates are international, as are 39% of the mathematics and computer
science graduates. Two-thirds of our international science- and engineering-degree
recipients stay in the United States, where they make educational, economic
and intellectual contributions. One-third of all U.S. Nobel laureates were
not born here.
The creation of knowledge happens most successfully in an
atmosphere of intellectual freedom. Yet, once they are in a U.S. institution,
international
students may come under special scrutiny -- simply because they are
foreign.
Post-9/11 government legislation has hampered some of the freedoms we
as Americans have sought to protect. In higher education specifically, government
contracts
now impose more restrictions on the participation of noncitizens. MIT,
no
stranger to government-funded research, recently declined a $404,000
study grant because
it would have restricted international student involvement.
The frustrations
of international students are taking their toll. Canadian and European
universities are attracting students who once would have come to the
U.S. I
recognize
the heightened role that educational institutions must play in national
security. But bad visa policies make it hard for international students
to study
here. This harms U.S. higher education, the creation and transmission
of knowledge and, ultimately, society -- exactly what the terrorists sought
to
do in
the
first place.
-- Catherine Stimpson is Dean of the Graduate School of
Arts and Science at New
York University.
Used with permission of the Los Angeles Times.
This file was updated on November 8,
2003
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