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Showing posts with label international student recruitment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label international student recruitment. Show all posts

Sunday, February 5, 2023

TAIWAN - Talent-strapped Taiwan seeks 20,000 ‘special’ professionals, 200,000 overseas students amid talent push

Title:
Talent-strapped Taiwan seeks 20,000 ‘special’ professionals, 200,000 overseas students amid talent push
 
Author:
Ralph Jennings
 
Published:
South China Morning Post, 2 February 2023

From the news article:
* Taiwan said in September that it was looking to attract 400,000 foreign workers by 2030 amid competition from the likes of Hong Kong, mainland China and Singapore 
 
* Taiwan’s domestic workforce is set to shrink after its population declined by last year due to a historically low number of births and the most deaths ever

Wednesday, July 6, 2022

International Student Recruitment During the Pandemic: The Unique Perspective of Recruiters from Small to Medium-Sized Higher Education Institutions [Scholarly Article - Higher Education Policy, April 2022]

Title:
International Student Recruitment During the Pandemic: The Unique Perspective of Recruiters from Small to Medium-Sized Higher Education Institutions
 
Author:
Melissa James
Faculty of Business, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, Canada
 
Published:
Higher Education Policy, 20 April 2022
 
Abstract:
Higher education can be considered an industry comprised of mobile students attending institutions worldwide (Findlay et al. in Int Migr 55(3):139–155, 2017). The global pandemic, COVID-19, has significantly impacted the mobility of these students. Higher education institutions (HEIs) have attracted students using international student recruiters, various marketing materials, websites, and educational agents (de Wit in Int High Educ 59:13–14, 2015). When COVID-19 began to unfold around the globe the disease impacted many sectors of the economy, but the impact of disease on the higher education industry is not well documented. The purpose of this study is to explore how higher education institutional student recruitment staff responded to the COVID-19 pandemic. This study explores the perspectives of international student recruitment staff in eight small to medium-sized institutions in Canada to understand the impact of the pandemic on their practice and to generate insights for policymakers to consider when planning the future of international student recruitment (ISR). The study found that these recruiters perceived their size to be a disadvantage and that the pandemic highlighted the inequities within higher education. Furthermore, recruiters feared the competitive position of small to medium-sized institutions is potentially deteriorating with implications on policy, resources, and internal relationships within HEIs.

Monday, October 19, 2020

AUSTRALIA - Could Australia be the student mobility comeback kid?

Title:
Could Australia be the student mobility comeback kid?
 
Author:
Louise Nicol
 
Published:
University World News, 17 October 2020
 
From the article:
While Australian international student recruitment is still overly dependent on Chinese in-bound students, that is an accusation that can equally be levelled at the US and UK. However, Australia is ahead of its competitors in exploring new markets and has the appetite to continue its development of opportunities.