1. Introduction
The UK has a long tradition and tremendous reputation for being at the forefront of
international higher education. The wide range of opportunities to undertake study and
research in UK universities have always been attractive to international students, and
many have returned to their home countries as UK alumni to achieve successful careers
and highly prestigious positions, for example as Presidents, leaders of business and
industry, designers and artists, writers, researchers, Nobel Laureates or social reformers.
Fifty years ago the number of international students in UK universities was relatively
modest (just over 20,000 full-time students, according to the 1963 Robbins Report), mostly
either from very wealthy families or scholarship recipients. However, in 2011/12 there were
435,235 international students studying at UK universities and other higher education
institutions (HEIs), according to latest data (HESA, 2012). Many will likely progress during
their careers to become high achievers and some will be just as successful as their
illustrious UK alumni predecessors. It is a given that higher education should make a
positive difference to the student’s knowledge, abilities and confidence, and also to the
wider society in which they live. All international higher education should additionally allow
the student to grow and develop in terms of intercultural awareness and self-knowledge.
Given the large absolute numbers now involved, provision of international higher education
has become a significant economic activity for the higher education (HE) sector and for the
UK as a whole (Conlon et al., 2011). There are potentially other substantial benefits to the
UK, not least from the increasing scale and reach of the international networks that now
comprise UK alumni (Miller, 2013). Understanding these benefits, as well as the benefits
that the alumni themselves obtain from their UK HE experience, so as to value and nurture
that potential goodwill, is in the national interest.
Such understanding will inform the HE sector and HE providers’ support both for current
international students and also for alumni to sustain their interest in the UK. Given that
‘word of mouth’ is an extremely important influence amongst students and others
considering future study destinations (Mazzarol & Soutar, 2002), how might the goodwill of
UK alumni be best leveraged also to support future UK provision of international HE?
This report offers evidence, chiefly based on the perceptions and attitudes of international
alumni, for the wider benefits that arise from international higher education in the UK –
benefits for the UK, for the alumni themselves and for the societies in which they now work
and live. It focuses primarily on benefits beyond the direct financial benefit of fees paid and
associated income (‘education exports’), and provides new insights through the eyes and
experiences of alumni.
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The Wider Benefits of International Higher Education in the UK
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