fbpx
Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
19th Mar 2012

New committee will advise US Homeland Security on student issues

The US Department of Homeland Security recently announced the formation of a new council to advise Secretary Janet Napolitano on student visa issues and other security-related topics that affect academe. The Chronicle of Higher Education reports that the high-level commission, comprising 19 university presidents and academic leaders, is one of the most prominent signs of greater responsiveness to higher education concerns by the department since it came in for criticism for regulatory loopholes and enforcement lapses that allowed little-known and unaccredited institutions to enrol thousands of international students in questionable degree programmes. In addition, Ms. Napolitano has created an Office of Academic Engagement to coordinate department-wide efforts on issues related to higher education, including student and recent graduate recruitment; international students; academic research; campus and community resiliency, security and preparedness; and faculty exchanges. The new office and the new Homeland Security Academic Advisory Council (HSAAC) are among the department's priorities under Ms. Napolitano, said Lauren Kielsmeier, the office's executive director. We wanted to better "connect the dots across the department in all the ways in which we have a nexus to academe." The new commission, which will hold its first public meeting tomorrow on 20 March, is charged with providing advice and recommendations to the secretary and to senior department officials. A list of panel members can be found here. "I think the commission is valuable for higher education and for the department to hear our concerns," said Wallace D. Loh, president of the University of Maryland at College Park, who will be chairman of the group. He said he hoped the commission could make recommendations to Homeland Security to help it "get that right balance" between welcoming foreign students and scholars and protecting national security. Source: The Chronicle of Higher Education

Most Recent

  • How good homepage design can encourage “stealth applicants” toward enrolment Read More
  • Five student research insights to keep in mind going into 2024 Read More
  • UK student housing crunch projected to worsen through 2026 Read More

Most Popular

  • Canada’s foreign enrolment grew by more than 30% in 2022 Read More
  • Measuring cost of study and cost of living across study destinations Read More
  • Recruiting in the Emirates: Big goals, world-class education, and new scholarships Read More

Because you found this article interesting

UK student housing crunch projected to worsen through 2026 The UK-based property consultancy Savills estimates that there were roughly four higher education students in London for every...
Read more
Nigerian economy shows its strength but the national currency is struggling again this year Nigeria is firmly on the radar of international student recruitment professionals as a major driver of overall growth...
Read more
Netherlands making progress toward ambitious student housing target Dutch officials are reporting that the Netherlands has already laid down concrete plans in response to 2022’s National...
Read more
Pandemic Event Visa scrapped as Australia continues overhaul of student visa policies Australia is continuing to tighten immigration policies and there are a number of implications for current and prospective...
Read more
Egypt rolls out new scholarships and residency rights in bid for more foreign students Egypt has introduced a package of new measures designed to further promote the country as an international study...
Read more
UK: Student visa grants now double pre-pandemic levels; ELT weeks recover to 81% of 2019 volumes Following on from the promising UCAS updates on 2023/24 international application volumes, the latest data release from the...
Read more
Australia takes action on fraud in student visa system In a 26 August 2023 announcement, the Australian government set out a series of measures to guard the...
Read more
“Steady recovery” underway for US English language training sector but visa issues persist A new study by EnglishUSA and BONARD based on a survey of 289 English language programme providers (ELPs)...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links