Author: IBL News

  • Elite U.S. Universities Show Dependency on International Students

    Elite U.S. Universities Show Dependency on International Students

    Mikel Amigot, IBL News | New York

    The Trump administration’s threat to block Harvard University from enrolling international students highlighted the risk other American universities face.

    NYU, Johns Hopkins, Columbia, and Carnegie Mellon have even larger international student shares than Harvard.

    This metric, which once reflected their financial strength and international prestige, now looks like a vulnerability.

    For universities, a decline in international students could have serious financial consequences, disrupting classrooms, research, and the next generation of workers in the United States.

    Currently, these are the schools with the most international students, according to a graphic released by The New York Times:

    School Students Pct. International
    Illinois Tech 6,571 51%

    Carnegie Mellon 14,517 44%

    Stevens Tech 7,461 42%

    Northeastern 29,738 40%

    New School 8,725 40%

    Columbia 28,756 40%

    Johns Hopkins 16,830 39%

    N.Y.U. 49,847 37%

    Clark 3,830 34%

    Rochester 10,109 33%

    Caltech 2,463 32%

    Chicago 16,499 31%

    Boston U. 29,104 30%

    M.I.T. 11,706 30%

    Harvard 20,807 28%

    U.S.C. 41,648 28%

    WashU 14,282 28%

    Penn 23,948 27%

    Brandeis 4,873 27%

    Rice 7,972 26%

    Cornell 25,334 26%

    Duke 16,557 25%

    Stanford 17,212 24%

    Saint Louis 12,904 24%

    Princeton 8,849 24%

    Yale 14,854 24%

    Northwestern 19,451 24%

    Illinois 47,118 23%

    Ga. Tech 25,178 23%

    U.T. Dallas 25,108 23%

    N.J.I.T. 10,388 23%

    Mt. Holyoke 2,206 22%

    Dartmouth 6,678 21%

    Georgetown 15,453 20%

    U.M.B.C. 11,523 20%

    Brown 10,832 19%

    Case Western 11,143 19%

    Grinnell 1,707 19%

    Emory 13,565 18%

    U.C.S.D. 40,716 18%

    Washington 43,118 18%

    Bentley 4,690 17%

    Fran. & Marshall 1,902 17%

    Berkeley 41,572 17%

    Denison 2,391 17%

    G.W. 18,049 17%

    Michigan 48,167 17%

    U.C. Irvine 35,511 16%

    Tufts 11,953 16%

    U.C. Davis 38,184 15%

     

    The share of international students studying at these colleges has been growing for the past two decades as rising incomes in countries like China and India have produced more families looking to educate their children in America.

    In addition, public research universities have turned to international students, as they pay the full tuition price.

    Higher education is a major American export. Over 1.1 million international students contributed about $43 billion to the U.S. economy during the 2023-24 academic year, most of it on tuition and housing, according to nonprofit NAFSA.

    Experts say the higher tuition paid by international students helps subsidize lower costs for U.S. students.

  • How Spotify is positioning its teams for the AI era

    How Spotify is positioning its teams for the AI era


    Gustav Söderström, Spotify’s Chief Product & Technology Officer, discusses how Spotify is navigating the AI revolution and reshaping its business.

    Source: Youtube

  • How is AI being used in the legal system and what are the ethical limits

    How is AI being used in the legal system and what are the ethical limits


    In what may be a legal first, a woman used artificial intelligence to create a video of her deceased brother speaking at the sentencing hearing for the man who killed him.

    Source: Youtube

  • AI to help San Francisco’s business district, analysis says

    AI to help San Francisco’s business district, analysis says


    Artificial intelligence could be the solution to helping San Francisco’s struggling downtown business district, a new analysis revealed.

    Source: Youtube

  • Social Security: How the celebrated AI chatbot talks in circles

    Social Security: How the celebrated AI chatbot talks in circles


    Social Security: How the celebrated AI chatbot talks in circles.

    Source: Youtube

  • Harvard University Sues Trump Administration Over Ban on Enrolling Foreign Students

    Harvard University Sues Trump Administration Over Ban on Enrolling Foreign Students

    IBL News | New York

    Harvard University on Friday sued the Trump administration over its ban on enrolling foreign students, calling it unconstitutional retaliation.

    On Thursday, the Department of Homeland Security said it would block international students from attending the nation’s oldest university.

    In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Boston, Harvard said the government’s action violates the First Amendment of the US Constitution and will have an “immediate and devastating effect for Harvard and more than 7,000 visa holders”.

    The Ivy League institution enrolls almost 6,800 foreign students at its campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Most are graduate students, and they come from more than 100 countries.

    The Department of Homeland Security gave Harvard 72 hours to turn over all documents on all international students’ disciplinary records and paper, audio, or video records on protest activity over the past five years to have the “opportunity” to have its eligibility to enroll foreign students reinstated.

    The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology extended an open invitation to Harvard international students and those accepted in response to the action against Harvard.

    The administration’s action and Harvard’s response signified a dramatic escalation of the battle between the administration and Harvard.

    Meanwhile, a federal judge—Boston judge Allison D. Burroughs—halted temporarily Trump’s administration’s effort to bar international students at Harvard, issuing a temporary restraining order against the federal edict. The judge agreed that Harvard had shown that its implementation would cause “immediate and irreparable injury” to the university.

    The move froze the Trump administration’s attempts against Harvard.

    • Harvard University: “Supporting Our International Students and Scholars”

    President Trump explains the “Harvard problem”:

     

  • This founder’s AI tool let’s you try on makeup virtually before you buy

    This founder’s AI tool let’s you try on makeup virtually before you buy


    Alice Chang founded Perfect Corp. in 2015, at age 52, and in 2022, became the first Taiwan-based software-as-a-service (SaaS) company listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Perfect Corp. provides augmented reality and AI SaaS solutions for the beauty and fashion industries.

    Source: Youtube

  • Teachers using AI tools more regularly, survey finds

    Teachers using AI tools more regularly, survey finds


    As many students face criticism and punishment for using artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT for assignments, new reporting shows that many instructors are increasingly using those same programs.

    Source: Youtube

  • The AI moment is now: Are teachers and students ready?

    The AI moment is now: Are teachers and students ready?


    The AI moment is now: Are teachers and students ready?

    Source: Youtube

  • Sergey Brin on the future of AI & Gemini

    Sergey Brin on the future of AI & Gemini


    A conversation with Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google and computer scientist working on Gemini, in reaction to a year of progress with Gemini.

    Source: Youtube