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These students are recreating China's most popular dating show on their college campus.
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– So when I heard there's going to be a Chinese TV style dating show, I was thinking like
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50 people in a classroom.
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But this is on a whole different level.
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And it's all happening in Illinois.
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The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign enrolls more than 5,000 Chinese students.
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So many it's been called “the University of China at Illinois.”
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And it's part of a global trend.
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In the US alone, there are now six times more Chinese students than there were just two decades ago.
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They account for one-third of all international students and contributed nearly $14 billion
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to the US economy in 2017.
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But what are the implications of so many students and so much money coming from just one country?
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We're traveling around the world to find out how China is reshaping…basically everything.
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This week…UNIVERSITIES.
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I'm Isabelle Niu reporting for Quartz.
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You're watching Because China.
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Xianghua Feng is a fourth year accounting student from China.
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Chinese students like Xianghua are here because of two converging trends.
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The first is pretty straightforward:
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More Chinese students study abroad than ever before,
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thanks to the country's fast-expanding middle class.
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The second reason is that universities in rich, English-speaking countries have been
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admitting more and more international students because they need money.
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Professor Hans de Wit studies international higher education.
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He says this is a relatively recent shift.
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– So when did universities begin to see international students as a revenue source?
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– That depends a little bit by country.
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The countries which were on the forefront were Australia and the United Kingdom.
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British and Australian universities introduced full international fees in the 1980s.
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Universities began aggressively marketing and recruiting.
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By 2010, the number of international students jumped by 600% in the UK and 2,000% in Australia.
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In the US, it happened a little later, partly because higher education has always been pretty expensive.
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– Tuition is very high for both local students and international students, so there
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was not an active need until recently to recruit international students for income reasons.
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Then 2008 happened.
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Funding for state universities was already in decline before 2008, but the recession
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made things much worse.
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So state universities were forced to find revenue elsewhere, and they found it in China.
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This chart sums it up.
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Here's the growth trend of Chinese students in the US before the recession.
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And this is post-recession.
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If we think of higher education as an export, then this is one area where the US has a huge
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trade surplus with China.
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All the Chinese students I talked to say they chose a state school
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because they can get more bang for their buck.
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That's true, even though a Chinese undergrad at a state university like UIUC
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pays about $20,000 more in tuition every year than an in-state student.
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Universities use revenue from international students to subsidize other operations,
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including creating scholarships for Americans.
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And the numbers show that it's not just good for the school, it's good for the American economy.
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– They shop in the local stores, they travel back and forth to China, they spend money
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in terms of their social life or traveling within the United States, so every part of
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the United States benefits from that.
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But there are also serious risks with relying on Chinese students' tuition.
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– If you are becoming so dependent on foreign students and in particular on one group,
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Chinese students, then your sustainability as an institution becomes very fragile.
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The business school gets about 20% of its revenue from more than 800 Chinese students enrolled here.
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– And that's a big enough number that that's something you want to be able to protect yourself against.
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This is the dean of the business school at UIUC, Jeff Brown.
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In 2017, his school did something unprecedented.
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The business school and engineering school together took out a $60 million insurance policy,
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in case of a sudden drop in Chinese student enrollment.
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– As far as we know we're the first to do this anywhere in the world.
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And we've gotten a lot of phone calls from other universities about how to do it.
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I know a lot of places are interested in doing it.
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And that deal was before President Trump's trade war with China.
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– I think the risks that we identified back four years ago is still very much there.
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One could argue actually that the risk is perhaps elevated.
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And making sure international students succeed takes resources.
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UIUC has invested a lot in programs that help international students adjust to American campus life.
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The university even broadcasted its football games in Mandarin in 2015.
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– I think the more that our domestic students and the students from China get to interact with each other
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and frankly I think that's not just good for the University of Illinois.
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I think that's good for the world.
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But differences in language and culture make those kinds of exchanges more difficult for everyone.
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– I think that there's definitely a stigma there, that they are kind of viewed as a different group of people
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that have different interests,
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I think if there was more interaction between the groups and there was less divide,
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it would only help the campus grow.
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If students go through the entire four years of college without interacting with the wider community,
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or improving their English, that's a missed opportunity
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for both domestic students and the international students themselves.
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That doesn't mean students aren't happy.
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Those I talked to said they're creating their own version of the American college experience.
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– Socially, I've had a blast. I've met lots of great people, lots of great friends.
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I personally think my college experience would have changed really at all
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with international students or without.
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Again, I believe that college is what you make of it.