Memorial University’s dean of graduate studies wasn’t so keen on China as a source of students in February 2011. In a post on her blog Postcards from the edge, Noreen Golfman wrote;
The point is that Memorial, if it is to play seriously in the realm of international recruitment, cannot afford merely to be part of the bandwagon. It has to get ahead of it. China is already so yesterday.
The academics even invented a word for the trend – surprise, surprise - at universities to seek more and more of their student population from other countries. They call it “internationalization”.
The motivation is simple: money. Golfman acknowledged that point up front in the same blog post. The available pool of young people is getting smaller, thanks to the fact that birthrates are dropping off in the developed world. As a result, universities have to go on a hunt for students to keep everything operating:
And, so, yes, the motivation has been, in the first instance, largely economic.
None of that is a surprise. Nor would anyone be surprised to find that by November 2011, Golfman was in China on a student-hunting safari. She was back there again in 2012.