In its latest progress update, jointly published on May 25 by the Department for International Trade and the Department for Education, the government says it has made โpositive progressโ against its two key ambitions.ย
The first of these, set out in the original strategy launched in 2019, was a target of 600,000 international higher education students in the UK โ the country reached this in the 2020-21 academic year, 10 years ahead of the goal date.ย
The second was to increase education exports to ยฃ35 billion per year by 2030. In 2019 (the latest data available) this was worth an estimated ยฃ25bn, an 8% increase since 2018.
But the update also highlights areas of concern as the effects of the pandemic continue to play out and the report recognises that some sub-sectors are โdisproportionately affectedโ.ย
Last week the English language teaching sector announced a 88% drop in student numbers in 2021, compared to pre-covid levels.ย
In its 2019 progress update, the government committed to supporting ELT by informing language schools of global opportunities and promoting them overseas.ย
The government now says it has taken actions including backing English UKโs #EnglishWithConfidence campaign, which aims to aid market recovery, and providing ยฃ600,000 of funding to the membership bodyโs PRELIM project, which created partnerships between English UK members and national English teacher associations globally.ย
The report also warns that global competition is increasing as markets reopen following the lifting of travel restrictions imposed during the pandemic.
โAchieving sustainable growth over the next decade will require us to think more strategicallyโ
Australiaโs international borders have been open since February, while New Zealand earlier this month announced that international education would fully resume on July 31, two months ahead of schedule.ย
Stakeholders from the sector welcomed the progress outlined in the UKโs report but agreed that the country cannot rest on its laurels.ย
โWe can all celebrate the UKโs success in meeting one of the key targets 10 years early, but achieving sustainable growth over the next decade will require us to think more strategically about the evolving needs of students and the global economy,โ said Alex Proudfoot, CEO at Independent Higher Education.ย
Ensuring education exports come from a โdiversified baseโ is a priority, the government said in the report.ย
Proudfoot told The PIE News that the UK has โthe chance to be a world leader not just in traditional higher education but in shorter, more flexible courses of technical and professional education which are designed to meet skills needs and support specific growth industriesโ.
However, he says these courses need support โthrough visa rules and targeted help for SMEsโ.ย
โWe need to redouble efforts to ensure that the UK remains a destination of choice for studentsโ
Similarly, Jamie Arrowsmith, assistant director of policy and global engagement at Universities UK International, said that the organisation is โpleasedโ that the international student target has been reached but that โthere is more we need to do if we are to build on this successโ.
โAs a sector we need to redouble efforts to ensure that the UK remains a destination of choice for students, focusing on the international student experience and supporting our graduates into great careers,โ Arrowsmith said.ย
The government committed in its 2021 update on the strategy to improve the academic experience and employability of international students, working with the UK Council for International Student Affairs, among others, to do so.ย
The report refers to the improvement of the student journey as one of its โsignificant achievementsโ, specifically highlighting the February launch of Myriad by UCAS, a platform for international postgraduate students, and the recentย call for evidenceย by the Office for Students in order to review existing practice on the international student experience.ย
Other listed achievements include the funding of exchange opportunities for 41,000 students under the Turing Scheme, which replaced the EUโs Erasmus+ scheme.ย
Almost half of the students taking part in the Turing Scheme were from disadvantaged backgrounds, according to the report.ย
It also points to the launch of the new graduate route in 2021 which it says has created a โmore streamlined experience for international studentsโ.ย
Both the introduction of the new graduate route and the Turing Scheme were highlighted in the governmentโs 2021 update.