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[News Focus] Korea 33rd of 36 OECD members in foreigner portion at colleges

Ministry vows to attract 39,000 more students from abroad by 2023

Foreign students participate in a job fair, held at the COEX in Seoul in October 2018. (Yonhap)
Foreign students participate in a job fair, held at the COEX in Seoul in October 2018. (Yonhap)

SEJONG -- South Korea’s universities were found to have far fewer foreign students in terms of their percentage, while the Education Ministry had unveiled its policy to actively attract students overseas.

Foreign students made up 2.3 percent of the total number of people studying at Korean universities, which is the 33rd among the 36 members, according to the International Student Mobility of 2020 indicator of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The figures mostly used 2017 data.

The OECD has provided the data on the number of international students enrolled as a proportion of the total enrolled in tertiary education. It stipulates that international students are those who received their prior education in another country and are not residents of their current country of study.

The figure for Korea is quite low compared to 4.3 percent for Japan, 5.2 percent for the US and 8.8 percent for the average of European members at the OECD.

Luxembourg, which also has a large portion of foreign residents, topped the list as the country recorded 46.7 percent in the percentage of foreigners in the total students at colleges or universities.

Australia ranked 2nd with 21.5 percent, followed by New Zealand with 19.6 percent, the UK with 17.9 percent, Switzerland with 17.8 percent, Austria with 17.2 percent and Canada with 12.9 percent.
 
(Graphic by Han Chang-duck/The Korea Herald)
(Graphic by Han Chang-duck/The Korea Herald)

The portion of foreign college students in Eastern European and Baltic nations was also higher than that of Korea -- 12.5 percent in the Czech Republic, 10 percent in Hungary, 8.2 percent in Estonia, 7.4 percent in Latvia, 6.9 percent in Slovakia, 4.6 percent in Lithuania and 4.1 percent in Poland.

The OECD also compared some nonmembers, in which Saudi Arabia posted 4.7 percent, South Africa with 4.3 percent, Russia with 4.1 percent and Argentina with 2.5 percent.

Korea’s Education Minister Yoo Eun-hae unveiled policy in December 2019 that the government would elevate the number of foreign students at local universities and colleges up to 200,000 by 2023. When its goal is attained, the portion of international students could approach 5 percent of the total enrolled.

The corresponding figure stood at 160,165 in Korea as of 2019, according to the data held by the Ministry of Education. So the goal for 2023 means a 24.8 percent (more than 39,000) growth target within four years.

Some market insiders advise that raising the quality of education should precede the government’s “ambiguous” instruction to universities to attract foreign students without suggesting systematic guidelines.

A Hanyang University professor was quoted by a news outlet as saying that “Japan has been successful in diversifying the nationality of foreign students as its government promoted joint researches between local and foreign elite universities.”

In Korea, some universities had recklessly attracted foreign students without legitimately testing their scholastic ability in an alleged bid to garner higher scores in the Education Ministry’s assessment. This sort of practices has eventually brought about overseas students’ lower acknowledgment in studying in Korea, critics say.

“Korea could possibly be outstripped by China in the coming years in the foreign student portion,” said a university employee in Seoul. “I have seen many cases that both Chinese and other foreign students quit before graduation.”

China, as a non-OECD member, posted only 0.4 percent in the portion. Nonetheless, its schools have huge growth potential, given its government’s enormous investments in the academic sector involving scientific researches.

Education Ministry data showed that the percentage of Chinese of the total foreign students at Korean universities has dropped to below 45 percent, while they accounted for about 70 percent about a decade ago.

By Kim Yon-se (kys@heraldcorp.com)

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