Tuesday, April 30, 2024
ADVT 
International

Nearly 2 lakh Indians studied in US in 2017-18

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Nov, 2018 02:48 PM
    India is the second largest international reservoir for the US higher education institutions having sent 196,271 students here in the last academic year, according to latest data.
     
     
    Their numbers continued to grow, with a 5.4 per cent increase in 2017-18 over the previous academic year, according to the Open Doors report from the State Department and the Institute of International Education.
     
     
    In the other direction, 4,704 students went to study in India during 2016-17, latest period for which data is available. It was an increase of 12.5 per cent from the previous year.
     
     
    The report said that there was a steep fall in the number of Indian students at the post-graduate level in the US. Their numbers came down by 8.8 per cent to 95,651 in 2017-18 compared to the previous year, while the number of students in practical training programmes after graduation shot up by 32 per cent to 75,390, according to the report.
     
     
    The number of undergraduate students also went up by 6.2 per cent to 23,346.
     
     
    Indians made up 17.9 per cent of total of 1,094,792 international students in the US last academic year.
     
     
    China sent 363,341 students, the most of any country.
     
     
    In 2016-17, there were 186,267 students from India in the US, a 24.9 per cent increase over the 165,918 the previous year.
     
     
    During 2016-17, there were 21,977 students in undergraduate programmes, 104,899 in graduate courses and 57,132 in practical training programmes.
     
     
    The State Department said international students contributed $42 billion to the US economy and supported 450,000 jobs.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Minister Shailesh Vara Leads Resignations In Fresh Brexit Jolt For PM May

    Indian-Origin Minister Shailesh Vara Leads Resignations In Fresh Brexit Jolt For PM May
    Shailesh Vara and two other ministers resigned today from her divided Cabinet over UK's "half-baked" divorce deal with the European Union.

    Indian-Origin Minister Shailesh Vara Leads Resignations In Fresh Brexit Jolt For PM May

    Imran Khan Says China Gave Pak 'Big' Aid Package, But Won't Reveal Amount

    Chinese leaders and sought aid to overcome the financial woes faced by his cash-strapped government.

    Imran Khan Says China Gave Pak 'Big' Aid Package, But Won't Reveal Amount

    Woman Ticketed For Not Holding Escalator Handrail To Be Heard By Supreme Court

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada agreed Thursday to hear the case of a woman who was ticketed and arrested after she refused instructions to hold onto an escalator handrail.

    Woman Ticketed For Not Holding Escalator Handrail To Be Heard By Supreme Court

    Mixing Business And Family: Justin Trudeau Turns To Singapore Ancestors To Widen Trade

    SINGAPORE — Slowly strolling along a paved walkway, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looked around Fort Canning and came face-to-face with his history.

    Mixing Business And Family: Justin Trudeau Turns To Singapore Ancestors To Widen Trade

    China Says Butt Out; Canada Calls For Release Of 'Arbitrarily' Detained Muslims

    China Says Butt Out; Canada Calls For Release Of 'Arbitrarily' Detained Muslims
    OTTAWA — Canada stood firm against Chinese criticism Thursday after the Trudeau government rallied more than a dozen countries in expressing concern to Beijing about its jailing of hundreds of thousands of its Muslim minority.

    China Says Butt Out; Canada Calls For Release Of 'Arbitrarily' Detained Muslims

    Don't Sign USMCA Until LGBTQ Language Excised, U.S. Lawmakers Urge Trump

    Don't Sign USMCA Until LGBTQ Language Excised, U.S. Lawmakers Urge Trump
    WASHINGTON — Conservative members of Congress are urging President Donald Trump to not sign the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement because of its protections for LGBTQ rights.

    Don't Sign USMCA Until LGBTQ Language Excised, U.S. Lawmakers Urge Trump

    PrevNext