Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2019
Cape Breton first public university
to have majority of international students

 
 
In our feature article this month, we look at the reasons behind the explosive growth in the number of international students at Cape Breton University and the dramatic impact it is having on the community. Read our feature article below. 

Are you an employer looking to fill an opening with a top candidate with experience in international education? Be sure to post your opening on our international education job board. Contact us for details. 

Registration closes next week for our Homestay Manager Professional Development Workshop in Vancouver. Be sure to register now if you want to attend! 

As always, please get in touch if you have any questions or comments. 


Upcoming Workshops

Toronto: Developing

Cultural Intelligence


International educators across North America are invited to join us in Toronto on May 9 for this one-day workshop. You will have an opportunity to assess your own Cultural Intelligence (CQ) and learn how to improve your ability to work with diverse stakeholders, including parents, students and agents. 

This workshop is being led by Malvina Rapko, a certified Cultural Intelligence (CQ) trainer. She has a broad knowledge of the challenges in international education, having served as the recruitment manager and homestay coordinator at the Saskatoon International High School Program. 

Please see the agenda for details.

Early Bird Registration: $395 plus tax. Early bird ends Feb. 28 so register now!  


Vancouver Homestay registration closes Feb. 21

There are only a few spaces left in our Homestay Manager Professional Development Workshop being held in Vancouver from Feb. 28-March 1. Registration closes Thursday, Feb. 21.
Register now!
Flood of international students in Cape Breton causes housing and job crunches
 
Is there a limit to the number of international students a Canadian community can absorb? Perhaps not, if Cape Breton University is any indicator. 

International enrolment at CBU has jumped to 2,800 students, double the number who attended last year. They now make up more than half the full-time student population - a first for a public university in Canada. 

International students from India are flocking to CBU
International students also represent a significant portion of the town of Sydney, which has just 31,000 residents (although Sydney is part of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality, which is larger).

John Mayich, Director of Student Affairs at CBU, admits that the school was unprepared for the flood of students last fall. More than 1,000 new international students showed up in September, many without a place to live. As we reported in October, finding suitable housing is the No. 1 worry of international students coming to Canada. 

Some fell victim to people posting apartment vacancies on Kijiji and then posing as landlords to show an apartment and collect rent "deposits." 

Others could not find an apartment anywhere. CBU was forced to appeal to the community to see if families had an extra bedroom to offer to international students - a kind of homestay arrangement minus the vetting and police checks.  

Finally, the university hired a full-time off-campus housing coordinator to screen apartment listings and teach international students ways to avoid scams. 

Faced with declining local enrolment

Mayich says it has been a long haul to attract international students to the tiny Nova Scotian community of Sydney, a four-hour drive from Halifax and hundreds of kilometres from Montreal or New York.

Cape Breton became a full-fledged university in 2005 and almost immediately confronted an enrolment problem. Young people were fleeing the region in droves, faced with a dearth of job opportunities. "There were just not enough youth in our local community to sustain the university," says Mayich. 

High school students from Ontario and other provinces were flocking to Halifax, lured by the opportunity to study in a mid-sized city with plenty of entertainment and amenities. For them, Cape Breton was seen as just too small and way too isolated.

About 15 years ago, Cape Breton began exploring the possibility that international students could solve its enrolment woes, with a focus on India. It has been persistently working on that market ever since. 

The attraction for international students? CBU is much easier to get into than prestigious universities such as University of Toronto or Queen's, allowing students with minimal academic standing to come to Canada. As well, its international tuition fees are a relatively modest $17,000 per year - several thousand dollars less than Dalhousie and a bargain compared to the $46,000 that UBC engineering charges.
 
Mayich credits this year's explosive growth to the hard work of CBU recruiters, the fact that the school has expanded its academic offerings and a supportive Canadian government issuing visas in a timely way. 

Student financials questioned

So me are wondering if the Canadian government is being too helpful. 

"In order to get a study permit, international student applicants must prove that they have sufficient funds to pay for the tuition fees, living expenses for themselves and any family members who come with them to Canada and return transportation," says Beatrice Fenelon, a spokesperson for Citizenship and Immigration Canada.

However, Cape Breton businesses advertising job openings have received hundreds of applications from international students who say they don't have enough money to survive in Canada. This raises the question of how thoroughly CIC is vetting the financial status of student visa applicants. 

In a region where 15 percent of the general population is unemployed (compared to 5.6 percent across Canada), international students may be squeezing out local job seekers. 

In addition, several students have visited food banks to ensure they have enough to eat. John Mayich says this may have been a cultural misunderstanding. "The students are saying that 'here's a place that has free food so I don't have to spend any money.' We have to educate them to explain the purpose of a food bank is for people who can't afford to buy food." 

Trying to diversify source countries

CBU staff are aware of the risks of relying on a single country like India for students. China and Vietnam are also strong markets. As we reported last year, the Saudi debacle should be a warning for all Canadian educational institutions to diversify where their students come from. The school is hoping to expand its recruitment efforts to South America and other regions. 

A few years ago, there was talk about staff and budget cuts at CBU due to weak enrolments. Now classes are almost full and the school and region are enjoying the $70 million cash injection that international students provide annually. 

"These students have been welcomed in our community," says Mayich. "Cape Breton has not had a lot of immigration or newcomers for a long time. It's been great to see how welcoming people have been." 
International Education
Jobs in Canada


Here are some of the current international education opportunities: 

Campus Operations Administrator, VanWest College, British Columbia 

Visit the job board for more!     

The job board is here to help employers find the best candidates in international education.
To post an international education career opening please contact us.