Top College News Subscribe to the Newsletter

Furman Recruits More International Students, Makes Global Connections

Published: Monday, August 22, 2011

Updated: Monday, August 22, 2011 17:08


F

urman was quiet when Jeffrey Kyeremeh arrived. It was Tuesday, August 16, three days before the rest of the freshman class was scheduled to move in, and hardly anyone was around but hall staff and the marching band.

Kyeremeh had just flown into Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport (GSP) from Atlanta earlier that morning. His journey hadn't begun in Atlanta though. It had begun over a week earlier, thousands of miles away in his hometown of Accra, Ghana. After four flights, a Greyhound bus ride and a short stay in Pennsylvania, Kyeremeh had finally made it to Furman. It was his first time on campus.

     "The place was just fantastic," he said. "The Internet doesn't do it justice. It's far better in person."

Kyeremeh is one of 22 students in this year's freshman class who have come from abroad to study at Furman. It is the largest group of international students Furman has ever had, more than triple the size of last year's group, bringing the total number of international students on campus to 42.

Students in this year's group come from nine different countries on four continents. China is the most represented country with 12 students. Furman recruited aggressively in China to capitalize on the growing number of Chinese seeking to attend college abroad.

     International Admission Counselor Martha Kimmel spearheaded Furman's recruitment efforts in China, traveling to high schools throughout the country that tend to send students abroad. During her visits, Kimmel sought to explain and promote liberal arts education, attempting to attract applicants who opted not to take take China's college placement test, the Gao Kao.

     Recruitment seems to be working; Furman received over 280 applications from international students, roughly half of whom were Chinese.

     Furman's commitment to increasing the size of the international population was most recently affirmed in the Strategic Planning Committee Preliminary Report released last April. The document states that Furman's "commitment to academic excellence should include … greater recruitment of international students."

     The decision to increase emphasis on international recruitment began before the Strategic Planning talks last spring. Yancey Fouche, Assistant Director of the Office of Study Away and International Education, attributed the shift to President Smolla's arrival.

     "My sense is that recent changes in the presidency and administration have brought a new focus on diversity and, with that, international students," she said.

      Fouche noted that Furman's attempt to internationalize is part of a broader trend throughout undergraduate education. She suggested that colleges and universities are recruiting international students for three reasons: to increase the quality of education, to attract global recognition, and to tap into a growing market of students.

     "The world can no longer be insular," Fouche said. "It's not a choice anymore."

      Figures from the Institute of International Education show that international student enrollment continues to grow in the United States. In 2010, over 200,000 new international students enrolled in American colleges. Total international enrollment rose to nearly 700,000, and almost 20% of these students came from China.

     According to the Office of Admission, the university has made it a long-term goal to make Furman 10% international in order to match enrollment figures at peer schools in the northeast. Furman is currently less than 2% international.

     The university recognizes that increasing the size of Furman's international population could present difficulties. The foremost concern is that growth occurs at the right pace, Fouche said.

"We have to make sure students come prepared and have a good experience."

 

The Orientation Before Orientation

Like other freshmen, international students must learn to adjust as they transition to life at Furman. However, their adjustments are larger and their transitions more difficult.

     The Office of Study Away and International Education (OSAIE) tries to help international students acclimate to life at Furman by bringing them to campus a few days before the rest of the freshman class. Call it the orientation before orientation.

     This year's group arrived Tuesday, August 16 and spent most of the day settling into their dorm and recovering from jet lag. Many didn't arrive until late in the evening following long, pan-oceanic flights. It took Yuqi Wei 42 hours and two connections to fly from Kunming, China to Greenville. Her plane didn't land at GSP until after midnight.

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

Be the first to comment on this article!





log out