Bis research paper number 128 The wider benefits of international higher education in the uk



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Tesco value lifestyle
” to make ends 
meet. Now he looked back philosophically on the whole experience, which had opened 
his eyes in many ways: 
“we had to live in a room, to share the toilet, and to share the 
bathroom, and the kitchen. It was hard for us. But it was good…yes, it was a very big, 
very, very big change. I was expecting to have some difficulty but it was harder than 
we thought.”
Where alumni felt they had overcome these hardships or other challenges themselves, 
they saw this as personal growth, feeling proud that they had coped and had developed 
the resilience to do so. This instilled additional self-confidence and led to self-belief that 
they could face future challenges. For some it translated to a new-found ‘can do’ attitude, 
which seemed to be reinforced by their perception of a British culture that supported 
enterprising behaviour (and perhaps also by study pedagogy which invited challenge).
A few alumni related difficulties in relation to their course – for example where it had 
changed since they had applied – and many initially found the style of teaching and 
learning unexpected. Some struggled in early months due to their relatively poor language 
skills, for example I84 from Indonesia in a northern university who struggled with local 
accents: 
“I recall my first day at the university shocked me because I hardly could not 
understand my lecture, basically [because of] the Yorkshire accent.” 
Others found aspects of the alcohol-fuelled British student social culture very off-putting, 
particularly those from certain cultures. One graduate (only) reported that she had directly 
experienced racial abuse from people in her university’s city. Some accepted the less 
commendable aspects of UK life as inevitable, for example Mexican mature PhD student 
I42 who came to Belfast with his family and thought: 
“the UK is a good place to live and 
work….it has dangerous zones…..but that is true everywhere.”
In fact some of his most 
positive experiences were of the primary school for his children and the friendships they 
made with other parents. 
As students, alumni had taken very different approaches to undertaking work during their 
stay in the UK. Some took the view that they should not undertake work or other activities 
that might detract from focus on their studies, possibly understandable where it was a 
single-year course. More than one stated that their father (who was presumably funding 
them) would not allow them to do any such work. 
More commonly, perhaps approaching half, the alumni said they had no option but to 
undertake part-time work on or off campus in order to generate funds to pay their costs of 
living. In most cases this was low-skilled ‘subsistence’ work, in a fast-food outlet, 
restaurant (sometimes of their own nationality) or in the kitchens, or as a sales assistant in 
a shop. For some this was also something of a culture shock, as I4 related: 
“I was working at Debenhams which was a novel experience, because coming from 
India you cannot imagine yourself working there. If I tell my parents—actually from the 
60 


The Wider Benefits of International Higher Education in the UK 
professional class of people where I come from in India— that I worked in a 
department store, one of them will definitely have a heart attack.”
Another Indian alumnus (I7), who studied Fashion and Design at Nottingham Trent, 
retrospectively valued that experience of types of part-time work. He said that his nature 
had changed as a result and that he now valued things in a different way – 
“like respecting 
every person
” – as in the different work settings he had come to view all workers as equal.
 
Perhaps 1 in 5 alumni had undertaken internships or work placements either integral to 
their course or separately, on recommendation of course tutors or their own initiative, to 
make the most of their overall study experience: 

Malaysian interviewee I32 at the London School of Fashion relished the placements 
she had obtained with London designers during her BA course, as well as doing other 
work behind the scenes at the London, Paris and Milan fashion weeks. Without a work 
permit she was not allowed to take up an impressive fashion house job offer that 
resulted, but became a lecturer in fashion in Shanghai and did freelance design work. 
She felt it was the work experiences allied to her course that placed her ahead of peers 
who also all had Masters degrees. 

I22 undertook two internships with major firms in summer breaks during her 
Manchester business degree, which she believed had greatly helped her to progress 
very rapidly back in the finance industry in her native South Africa. 

Chinese graduate I21 studied microelectronics at Southampton and focused on his 
studies during term-time, but undertook three internships with law firms on patent work. 
He has subsequently changed career to become a patent lawyer.
Relatively few of the alumni reported that they had undertaken volunteering activities while 
in the UK. Volunteering appears to be much more established as part of the home student 
HE experience in the UK than in other countries, at least as reported by these alumni. For 
the few (perhaps 10) that did discover volunteering, it could be quite profound for them 
personally, and many of them have gone on to set up voluntary activities and/or volunteer 
in their own countries, which they had not before. It also gave them a wider viewpoint on 
UK society, bringing them into contact with new people and types of people. The impact of
volunteering activity after return to alumni’s home countries is included ni benefit type D2. 

I99 from Turkey was inspired by the volunteering she saw in the UK: “
I saw lots of 
charity works in UK. I really like it. In my home country, we don’t have these charity 
groups enough. I am happy to work with the British community who [are] very 
hardworking in this rehabilitation centre. They are helping children and raising funds for 
the children’s needs.”

Chevening scholar I80 had worked for Oxfam while studying in the UK and commented 
on the rarity of volunteering back in Nigeria: 
“I’m [now] involved in a lot of civil society 
organisations and NGO’s. I help with this, I did volunteering which is something that [is 
needed for] change in Nigeria. But that is something that I picked up from the UK 
working with Oxfam at the time.”

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The Wider Benefits of International Higher Education in the UK 
In general, however, the greatest direct impact from undertaking employment in the UK 
was obtained, perhaps unsurprisingly, by those graduates whose circumstances and visa 
conditions permitted them to remain in the UK to work after their degree. For many of 
these graduates it kick-started their career progression, although by the time of interview 
many had returned home or were elsewhere in the global labour market, as they had 
become highly mobile with their workplace experience. Some working in STEM fields
especially, did expect to stay in the UK long-term, but this was a minority. The issues of 
skilled migration and the additional career enhancement benefit perceived from post-study 
work have been addressed in earlier sections.

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