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Global: International Grad Students' Interest in U.S. Higher Ed Declines

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chronicle.com

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global@chronicle.com

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Wed, Jan 31, 2018 10:38 PM

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--------------------------------------------------------------- Global Wednesday, January 31, 2018 -

[THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION] #subscribelink [Subscribe Today]( --------------------------------------------------------------- [Subscribe to The Chronicle today to get access to premium content and more.]( Global Wednesday, January 31, 2018 --------------------------------------------------------------- [Sign up for this newsletter]( This Week’s Highlights --------------------------------------------------------------- [International Grad Students’ Interest in American Higher Ed Marks First Decline in 14 Years]( By Bianca Quilantan Colleges and universities saw a 1-percent drop in fall enrollments and a 3-percent drop in applications. [Most Americans Think AI Will Improve Lives and Eliminate Jobs — Just Not Theirs]( By Scott Carlson Three-quarters of respondents to a new poll think artificial intelligence will have a positive impact on their lives and work. Only 23 percent think it will endanger their jobs. [How College May Actually Limit Students’ Exposure to Different Religions]( By Bianca Quilantan It’s a commonly accepted narrative that students are exposed to diverse religious perspectives for the first time while in college. A new study says that the opposite may be true. [How Do You Keep Students From Checking Out in a Large Lecture Hall?]( Colleges can innovate their way out of some problems. Others — like those distracted students in the back of the auditorium — may be harder to crack. [After Seven Suicides, a Professor Unearths Stories of Where People Find Resilience]( [premium] By Chris Quintana Daniel Jackson, a computer scientist, photographed and interviewed people at MIT to share how they have coped with competitive academics, personal loss, and suicidal feelings. Views --------------------------------------------------------------- [The Benefits of Doing It Wrong]( By David Gooblar Why you should invite your students to write badly, perform an experiment incorrectly, or botch an equation. [Negative or Positive? Answer (a) or (b)]( A high school in Taiwan poses to its ninth-graders a grammar question about negative vs. positive clauses, and it worries Geoff Pullum a lot. [Reinventing the Survey Course]( By James M. Lang When it comes to putting innovation into practice, a new book argues, not all classes are created equal. [Stop Fixating on the Size of Your Audience]( By Mark Carrigan Making an impact with social media is about much more than follower counts. [View the Latest Jobs in Higher Education]( Tools & Resources --------------------------------------------------------------- [Focus: The New Landscape for International Students]( President Trump’s executive orders seeking to limit travel to the United States from several predominantly Muslim countries have affected many people around the world who were considering studying in the United States. [This 28-page collection]( looks at what colleges are doing to overcome the uncertainties the orders have triggered. [See our other Focus collections here.]( [THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION] 1255 Twenty-Third St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037 [Like us on Facebook]( [Follow us on Twitter]( [Add us on Google+](chroniclehighereducation/posts?elqTrackId=26aca447547e424483ccf189a978fe76&elq=db881b60ff2d41a39d8c8fed00d06c4f&elqaid=17684&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=7785) [Subscribe Today]( Get the insight you need for success in academe. [Stop receiving this newsletter]( Copyright © 2018 The Chronicle of Higher Education

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