URC to launch Global Detroit International Student Retention Program

The New Economy Initiative of Southeast Michigan has awarded the University Research Corridor (URC) a three-year, $450,000 grant to launch the Global Detroit International Student Retention Program to retain international talent in the region.

The award was announced during the Mackinac Policy Conference, which took place June 1-3 on Mackinac Island.

The Global Detroit International Student Retention Program is based on recommendations outlined in a May 2010 Global Detroit study funded by the New Economy Initiative. The objectives of the program include:

• Marketing the region to international students from the moment of first contact to graduation

• Recruiting employers to hire international students

• Navigating immigration legal barriers

• Developing an ongoing presence and relationships with participating universities, international students, and related international organizations

U-M and UM-Dearborn are strategic partners in the Global Detroit International Student Retention Program, and U-M is part of the URC along with Michigan State and Wayne State universities.

URC Executive Director Jeff Mason said the Global Detroit International Student Retention Program directly supports the URC’s mission to transform, strengthen and diversify the state’s economy. It also cooperatively links the URC with other college and university partners in Michigan to achieve this shared goal.

“Michigan’s reinvention requires us to retain the best talent we can,” Mason said, “regardless of whether those students hail from Michigan or come here to study in our great universities. By attracting and retaining the best and brightest, we can accelerate the pace of change to a high-tech, highly skilled knowledge-based economy.”

Key findings of the Global Detroit report reveal that:

• Michigan has more than 23,500 international students — the eighth largest population of international students of any state.

• International students contribute nearly $600 million annually to our local economies.

• Immigrants file nearly 50 percent of Michigan’s international patents and are three times as likely to start a business.

New Economy Initiative Director David Egner said the Global Detroit International Student Retention Program is an appropriate next step in response to these compelling factors. Egner said he concurs with Global Detroit’s recommendation that international student retention promises to “increase the prosperity of the region, as well as the number of high-tech firms … (and) make the region more innovative.”

“Not only can these students improve the overall education levels of the state’s workforce,” Egner said, “but, because Michigan’s international students overwhelmingly excel in critical STEM fields (science, technology, engineering and mathematics), they can contribute to the growth of emerging sectors in Michigan’s new economy.”

The Global Detroit Study noted research by Vivek Wadhwa at Duke University and Anna Lee Saxenian at the University of California-Berkeley, which shows that “foreign born talent already has had a profound impact on Michigan’s tech economy with an estimated 32.8 percent of all the high technology firms created in the state from 1995-2005 having at least one immigrant founder.”

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder publicly announced his support for retention of international talent as part of his strategy for economic recovery. “In my State of the State address this year I called for us to establish an exciting new initiative to encourage immigrants with advanced college degrees to come to Michigan to live and work,” Snyder said. “This effort will complement my Global Michigan Initiative. I am pleased that NEI has entrusted the URC to begin efforts in southeast Michigan to retain international students. Immigration made us a great state and country. It is time we embrace this concept again as a way to speed our reinvention.”

The Global Detroit International Student Retention Program Strategic Partners include Eastern Michigan University, Lawrence Technological University, Michigan State University, Oakland University, U-M, UM-Dearborn, Wayne State University as well as the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA-Michigan), the Detroit Regional Chamber, The New Economy Initiative of Southeast Michigan and Michigan’s University Research Corridor.

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