The University of Saskatchewan (U of S) is seeing a surge in applications from international students.
Many of them are from south of the border.
“We have seen an increase of American students, and people that have a U.S. address,” Danny Freire from student recruitment said.
“Funny enough, some of them are Canadians that want to come back to Canada.”
READ MORE: Trump, Brexit help Canadian universities recruit both profs and students
Between Nov. 9, 2016 and Jan. 2, 2017, the number of people who were living in the U.S. when they applied to the U of S doubled from the same time period a year ago.
Get daily National news
“Most Canadian universities report healthy increases in U.S. applications,” Dominic Giroux, co-chair of Universities Canada Board, said.
“Between 20 to 70 per cent depending on the Canadian university.”
Jason Locke, who is a PhD student from Charlotte, N.C., said the trend doesn’t surprise him.
“I think a lot of people in America are asking what can we do. And some people are legitimately feeling afraid for their future and their safety,” Locke said.
“The current climate is something that I would not say, ‘OK you should come to America.'”
- Ontario school boards record more deficits a year after supervisors sent in
- Ontario education minister ‘clarifying’ students will be allowed to miss class for sports
- Ontario education minister urges parents not to pull kids from school for sports
- Saskatchewan NDP urges province to repeal pronoun law affecting LGBTQ+ youth
READ MORE: U.S. applications to Canadian universities surge following Donald Trump win
The U of S is also seeing an increase in applications from China, India, and the Philippines compared to 2016., a possible indication of how the politics in the U.S. is drawing students to Canada.
“We do see around the world some instability; in Europe and in the rest of North America some instability,” Giroux said.
“Canada is known for being a stable country; a democratic country with a very high quality post-secondary education system. And that’s something we can capitalize on as a country.”
“I’m very deeply saddened by what’s happened in my country. When I look back, it’s like I don’t recognize this place anymore,” Locke said.
“For me, I’m glad that I came.”
Comments
Comments closed.
Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.
Please see our Commenting Policy for more.