Calvin, GVSU, MSU Fare Well in Study Abroad Report

From: Phil de Haan <dehp@calvin.edu>
Date: Mon Nov 13 2006 - 16:00:47 EST

November 13, 2006 == MEDIA ADVISORY

The Institute for International Education (IIE) has released its annual "Open
Doors" report, a summary of study abroad by U.S. college and university
students. Michigan State, Calvin College and Grand Valley State University are
all among the top 20 in their respective categories.

Calvin has had a strong study abroad emphasis for several decades and annually
is among the top schools in the country for students who study abroad.

In the latest IIE report, Calvin ranked fourth in the country among
baccalaureate institutions for the number of students studying abroad in the
2004-2005 school year. Calvin had 527 students studying off campus that year,
trailing only Minnesota's St. Olaf College, College of St. Benedict/St. John's
University, also in Minnesota, and Lee University, Tenn.

Grand Valley State was 12th among master's institutions with 465 students
abroad in 2004-2005 and Michigan State was second among doctoral and research
institutions with 2,385 students abroad.

Over the past decade, the number of U.S. students studying abroad has more
than doubled. Those numbers are buoyed in part by growing numbers of students
heading to destinations in Asia and South America.

In addition Open Doors 2006 data shows that the largest growth area is
short-term study. The majority (56%) of U.S. students elected summer, January
term and other programs of less than one semester.

Calvin has both semester-long programs abroad as well as numerous three-week
programs abroad during the college's January term (called Interim). At Calvin
students can live and study in China as well as such countries as Honduras,
Ghana, Hungary, Spain and more. Calvin also has semester-long U.S. programs in
New Mexico and Washington, D.C.

Calvin director of off campus programs Ellen Monsma says the college believes
that off-campus study programs broaden a student's perspectives on both the
world and the kingdom of God, enhance a student's self-discipline and provide
students with "coherent, comprehensive and authentic learning experiences that
have an unusually deep and long-lasting effect."

While Calvin College annually sends numerous students abroad for study, it
also is becoming a place where many students come from other countries for a
four-year, liberal arts degree. In the latest Open Doors report Calvin is rated
ninth in the country among baccalaureate institutions for number of
international students on campus. In 2004-2005 Calvin had 298 international
students.

For more see http://www.opendoors.iienetwork.org

-end-
Received on Mon Nov 13 16:01:09 2006

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