News 25 Indians Told To Leave US University After Being Given Admission

Technoglitch

Core Member
At least 25 Indian students in their first semester of computer sciences programme at Western Kentucky University have been asked to return to India or find placement in other schools, because they did not meet the admission standards of the varsity, The New York Times said on Tuesday as Prime Minister Narendra Modi was on a US visit.

Some 60 Indian students were enrolled for the programme in January this year and the university was said to have used international recruiters to enrol them.

James Gary, the chairman of Western Kentucky's computer science programme, told the Times that "almost 40" of the students did not meet the requirements of their admissions, even though they were offered remedial help by the university.


This means that 35 students may be allowed to continue while 25 "must leave", the newspaper said.

Gary said permitting the students to continue in the programme would "be throwing good money after bad" because they were unable to write computer programmes, a necessary part of the curriculum and a skill that US schools teach to undergraduates.

"If they come out of here without the ability to write programmes, that's embarrassing to my department," Gary said, explaining why the university could not permit them to continue.

The students had been admitted after a recruitment campaign in India where the recruiters had run advertisements offering "spot admission" to the university, as well as tuitiondiscounts.

The university Senate has now endorsed a resolution expressing concern about therecruitment campaign which was part of the university's efforts to lift enrolment and revenue in the face of deep state budget cuts, the newspaper said.

The university in a statement said it had altered its international recruitment efforts in India. The school will also send members of the computer science faculty to India to meet withstudents before offers of admission are made in the future.

The chairman of the Indian Student Association at Western Kentucky University, AdityaSharma, has expressed concern for the students who have been asked to leave.

"I definitely feel badly for these students," said Sharma, a graduate student in public health administration. "They've come so far. They've invested money into it."

But he admitted that some of the students had adopted what he called a "casual" approach to their studies. "They could not meet their GPA (grade point average), so the university had to take this decision."


25 Indians Told To Leave US University After Being Given Admission
 

Prateek Marwadi

EntMnt Rockers
Finest Member
if the students genuinely failed to qualify then how it is the fault of US univ?
then y they gave the admissions ? what about the loan and money one has borrowed to have been a part of the university ?
y suddenly they realised it now ?

many indians have been facing problems in america as well as in australia during their studies

this is being done deliberately
 

Technoglitch

Core Member
then y they gave the admissions ? what about the loan and money one has borrowed to have been a part of the university ?
y suddenly they realised it now ?

many indians have been facing problems in america as well as in australia during their studies

this is being done deliberately
the fault has to be with the agencies present in India
 

Prateek Marwadi

EntMnt Rockers
Finest Member
the fault has to be with the agencies present in India
y america gave the admissions ?
and if they gave then their must be another way. e.g. give those students some time and ask them to learn whatever is left accoring to curriculum

cheap americans
 

Technoglitch

Core Member
y america gave the admissions ?
and if they gave then their must be another way. e.g. give those students some time and ask them to learn whatever is left accoring to curriculum

cheap americans
It is because of some cheap Indian men who mint money in the education. Just to fill in their pockets they do all kind of activities to get them placed in US colleges and fault lies with students too.
 

Technoglitch

Core Member
An aggressive campaign to recruit graduate students from India to study at Western Kentucky University has ended badly, with more than one-third of the students asked to leave the program after their first semester, a university official said.

The university used international recruiters to find the students, compensating the services based on how many students they enrolled. The outcome, which will force the students to return to India or find placement in another university or program in the United States, illustrates a pitfall of using such recruiters.

Western Kentucky’s deal with the recruiting company, Global Tree Overseas Education Consultants, is a type of arrangement that is becoming more common as a thriving international educational consultancy industry casts a wide net in India and other countries, luring international students to United States colleges struggling to fill seats. The university agreed to pay Global Tree a commission of 15 percent of the first year’s tuition of students who enrolled, or about $2,000 per student.

But as colleges increasingly rely on these international recruiters, educators worry that students may be victimized by high-pressure sales tactics, and that universities are trading away academic standards by recruiting less qualified students who pay higher tuition.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/20/u...ion=click&contentCollection=meter-links-click

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/07/us/indian-students-western-kentucky-university.html?_r=0
 
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