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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
For Immediate Release December 28, 2005
2005/1216
Media Note
U.S. Departments of State and Education
to Co-host U.S. University Presidents Summit
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Education Margaret
Spellings will co-host the U.S. University Presidents Summit on International
Education January 5-6, 2006, in Washington, DC. The Secretaries will
engage leaders of U.S. higher education in a renewed partnership to
strengthen international education, emphasizing its importance to the
national interest. Secretaries Rice and Spellings have called this Summit,
organized by the State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs, to initiate a dialogue on the need for government to work collaboratively
with the non-governmental sector on the future of U.S. higher education
in a global arena.
"Through this Summit, Secretary Rice and Secretary Spellings
and their respective Departments want to reach out to college and university
presidents to reinforce a common interest in attracting foreign students
and scholars to U.S. institutions," notes Karen Hughes, Under Secretary
of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs. "Of equal importance
is seeking investment in educating globally competitive U.S. students
to work in fields of international interest."
Summit attendees will represent the full richness and diversity of
the higher education system in the United States, coming from all 50
states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, and will include leading
public and private Ph.D. granting institutions, as well as community
colleges, historically black institutions, Hispanic-serving institutions,
religiously affiliated institutions, and women’s colleges. Also invited
are the principal presidential higher education associations and the
heads of the federal science and humanities bodies.
Among other topics, the Summit will focus on how to attract foreign
students and scholars to the United States, as well as how to encourage
more American students to receive part of their education abroad. In
addition, participants will discuss marketing of U.S. higher education
programs abroad, reaching out to underserved populations, understanding
visa and regulatory processes, cooperating to meet exchange priorities,
and utilizing fully the international education resources of community
colleges. The Summit will also draw attention to the key investments
required to strengthen international higher education for Americans,
including increasing access to study abroad, encouraging non-traditional
study abroad locations, strengthening non-traditional language acquisition,
developing coherent international strategies at U.S. universities and
colleges, and engaging the public and private sectors in a shared national
vision for the future.
For further information, contact:
Nicole Deaner, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, 202-203-7613
Adam Meier, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, 202-203-7026
Chad Colby, Department of Education, 202-401-1576
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