As a member of the U.S. for Success Coalition’s Advisory Council, we are pleased to share the following updates with the AIRC community.
Quarterly Update (covering the period from November 2024 to January 2025)
What Our Coalition Leaders are Saying
To mark the one-year anniversary of our coalition, we issued a press release: U.S. for Success Coalition Sets New Goals and Welcomes New Members to Achieve International Student Success.
See our 2025 Coalition goals here.
Following the election, a number of our Executive Committee members issued statements and recommendations for the new Administration.
Defending and Maintaining the Integrity of our Student Visa Programs
On January 28, 2025, NAFSA’s Joann Ng Hartmann and Jill Allen Murray issued a fact-based response to alleged abuse of the U.S. Student Visa system. In Alleged Abuse of the U.S. Student Visa System: A Fact-Based Response, they make important clarifications on issues such as student visa status, student visa integrity, international student transfers upon entry, curricular practical training, and the role of associations and coalitions.
Late last year, the U.S. for Success Coalition established a Visa Integrity Task Force to explore whether there are issues that need to be addressed in order to ensure the security of our system continues to serve the vast majority of international students and higher education institutions who are adhering to responsible, ethical practices. As a coalition, we are committed to the success of international students, and as such, we have a vested interest in preserving the integrity of the F-1 and J-1 student visa categories. There will always be those who will try to take advantage of existing visa categories and pathways for other purposes, and we aim to minimize any bad actors to ensure the vast majority of students and higher ed institutions who are using the system with integrity can continue to do so. Our Visa Integrity Task Force is currently focusing on preparing a brief informational document to address the alleged improper use of initial school transfer by arriving F-1 students.
Steve Springer, Director, Regulatory Practice Liaison of NAFSA, serves as chair, with support from task force member representatives of the following organizations: AACRAO, AIRC, ICEF, NAFSA, and Shorelight.
Higher Education Engagement: Resources and Upcoming Events
The U.S. for Success Coalition continues its working group, chaired by Joann Ng Hartmann of NAFSA and Kate Campbell of IIE, to strengthen the Coalition’s work with U.S. higher education institutions in order to increase and diversify international student enrollment and post-graduation pathways across all U.S. states and territories. Our 2025 goals for this part of the coalition’s work are to:
We were pleased that so many of you were able to join our welcome event on December 4 with higher education institutions. There will be additional sessions on how U.S. higher education institutions can benefit from the coalition’s work at the upcoming March AIEA conference in Houston, Texas, and the May NAFSA Conference in San Diego, California.
What We Can Do Together
United, informed and vocal, together we can make change happen.
As noted in Erica Stewart’s emails to Connecting Our World advocates (if you haven’t signed up to receive those emails, you can do so here), here are a few things we can all do:
Additional Resources from Our Advisory Council Members
For each quarterly update, we intend to share relevant data from the coalition’s leadership about market trends in student mobility and enrollment. Here are some recently released reports from Advisory Council Members ApplyBoard and IDP:
ApplyBoard has released two reports you may find useful for our own planning and analysis:
IDP issued a new white paper, co-published with inSpring: “Connecting Industry & Education: International Talent as a Solution to the U.S. Labor Shortage.”
The United States is facing a critical labor shortage, fueled by demographic headwinds and an increasing demand for skilled labor. The 1.1 million international students already in the country, trained with in-demand skills and eager to work, represent a powerful solution. Despite clear benefits, these talented individuals remain an underutilized resource.
Download IDP’s white paper, which takes a deep dive into:
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