A crackdown on foreign students is alarming college leaders, who say the Trump administration is using new tactics and vague justifications to push some students out of the country.
College officials worry the new approach will keep foreigners from  in the U.S.
Students stripped of their entry visas are receiving orders from the Department of Homeland Security to leave the country immediately — a break from past practice.
Some students were targeted over  or criminal infractions — or even traffic violations. Others were left wondering how they ran afoul of the government.
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At Minnesota State University in Mankato, President Edward Inch told the campus Wednesday that visas were revoked for five international students for unclear reasons.
He said school officials learned about the revocations when they ran a status check in a database of international students after the  at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. The State Department said the detention was related to a drunken driving conviction.
“These are troubling times, and this situation is unlike any we have navigated before,†Inch wrote in a letter to campus.
 campaigned on a promise to deport foreign students involved in pro-Palestinian protests, and federal agents started by detaining Columbia graduate student , a green-card-holder and Palestinian activist who was prominent in protests at Columbia last year. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently said students are being targeted for involvement in protests along with others tied to “potential criminal activity.â€
In the past two weeks, the government apparently widened its crackdown. Officials from colleges around the country discovered international students' entry visas were revoked and, in many cases, their legal residency status terminated without notice — including students at Arizona State, Cornell, North Carolina State, the University of Oregon, the University of Texas and the University of Colorado.
Some of the students are working to leave the country on their own, but students at Tufts and the  were detained by immigration authorities — in the Tufts case, even  the student's legal status changed.

A person walks on the University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis.
Feds bypass colleges to move against students
School officials say the federal government is quietly deleting foreigners' student records instead of going through colleges, as was done in the past.
Students are being ordered to leave the country with a suddenness universities have rarely seen, said Miriam Feldblum, president and CEO of the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration.
In the past, when international students had entry visas revoked, they generally were allowed to keep legal residency status. They could stay in the country to study, but would need to renew their visa if they left the U.S. and wanted to return. Now, increasing numbers of students are having their legal status terminated, exposing them to the risk of being arrested.
“None of this is regular practice,†Feldblum said.
At North Carolina State University, two students from Saudi Arabia left the U.S. after learning their legal status was terminated, the university said. N.C. State said it will work with the students to complete their semester outside the country.
Philip Vasto, who lived with one of the students, said his roommate, in graduate school for engineering management, was apolitical and did not attend protests against the war in Gaza. When the government told his roommate his student status was terminated, it did not give a reason, Vasto said.
Since returning to Saudi Arabia, Vasto said his former roommate's top concern is getting into another university.
“He’s made his peace with it," he said. "He doesn’t want to allow it to steal his peace any further.â€

Students walk on the University of Texas campus in Austin.
Database checks turn up students in jeopardy
At the University of Texas at Austin, staff checking a federal database discovered two people on student visas had their permission to be in the U.S. terminated, a person familiar with the situation said. The person declined to be identified for fear of retaliation.
One of the people, from India, had their legal status terminated April 3. The federal system indicated the person was identified in a criminal records check “and/or has had their visa revoked.†The other person, from Lebanon, had their legal status terminated March 28 due to a criminal records check, according to the federal database.
Both people were graduates remaining in the U.S. on student visas, using an option allowing people to gain professional experience after completing coursework. Both were employed full time and apparently had not violated requirements for pursuing work experience, the person familiar with the situation said.
Some students had visas revoked by the State Department under an obscure law barring noncitizens whose presence could have “serious adverse foreign policy consequences.†Trump invoked the law in a January order demanding action against campus antisemitism.
But some students targeted in recent weeks had no clear link to political activism. Some were ordered to leave over misdemeanor crimes or traffic infractions, Feldblum said. In some cases, students were targeted for infractions previously reported to the government.
Some of the alleged infractions would not have drawn scrutiny in the past and likely will be a test of students' First Amendment rights as cases work their way through court, said Michelle Mittelstadt, director of public affairs at the Migration Policy Institute.
“In some ways, what the administration is doing is really retroactive," she said.
The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities is requesting a meeting with the State Department over the issue. It’s unclear whether more visas are being revoked than usual, but officials fear a chilling effect on international exchange.
Many of the association’s members recently saw at least one student's visa revoked, said Bernie Burrola, a vice president at the group. With little information from the government, colleges have been interviewing students or searching social media for a connection to political activism.
“The universities can’t seem to find anything that seems to be related to Gaza or social media posts or protests,†Burrola said. “Some of these are sponsored students by foreign governments, where they specifically are very hesitant to get involved in protests.â€
There’s no clear thread indicating which students are targeted, but some were from the Middle East and China, he said.
At Texas A&M, officials who looked into why three students had their status terminated said they had long-resolved offenses on their records, including one with a speeding ticket.
America's universities have long been seen as a top destination for the world's brightest minds — and they've brought important tuition revenue and research breakthroughs to U.S. colleges. But international students also have other options, said Fanta Aw, CEO of NAFSA, an association of international educators.
“We should not take for granted that that’s just the way things are and will always be,†she said.
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Associated Press writers Steve Karnowski in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Angeliki Kastanis in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
America's college-aged population is declining. Universities will have to make cuts.
America's college-aged population is declining. Universities will have to make cuts.

As America's population ages and some state populations are expected to decline, demographic shifts may profoundly reshape the country's colleges and universities.
Academics have long worried about the enrollment cliff, a multiyear decline in traditional college-aged students following an anticipated peak in 2025. Although the total number of undergraduate students at America's universities rose steadily from approximately 7.3 million in 1970 to around 18 million in 2010, enrollment has stagnated, with enrolled this past fall, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.
Partly due to a drop in birth rates following the 2008 financial crises, the nation's college-aged population is expected to decline over the next five to 10 years by as much as 15%. While declines are not uniform nationwide, college enrollment is expected to fall dramatically in some states, and universities have already made painful cuts in anticipation.
believe some kind of postsecondary degree or certificate is valuable, according to a 2024 Gallup and Lumina Foundation report. However, the report found significant barriers to both enrolling in and completing a degree, with 1 in 3 adults enrolled in college having considered dropping out, largely due to concerns about mental health and the cost of tuition.
At the same time, an increasing number of American adults have little or no confidence in a college education, with that number surging from 10% in 2015 to , according to a 2024 Gallup survey.
The rise of online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, a decline in the college-aged population, and concerns that a college degree provides diminishing returns as tuition rises and some jobs diminish together put the future of some programs and institutions at risk.
looked at data from the University of Virginia's and elsewhere to see which states are expected to experience the biggest population drops through 2050.
Declines in youth populations vary by region, leading to uncertainty in higher ed

America's population is getting older, with the number of people aged 75 to 79 anticipated to , a July 2024 Cooper Center study found. The demographic of those aged 80 to 84 is expected to grow by 81%, from 6.3 million in 2020 to 11.5 million in 2050.
However, the population projection found that the number of anticipated college-aged students is expected to decline in many states nationwide in the coming decades. The Department of Education, on the other hand, anticipates the number of high school graduates will .
Although the total population of college-aged students is expected to increase by 6% to around 23.3 million by 2050, the figure pales in comparison to the anticipated 12% increase in the overall population of the United States during the same time period, the study found.
The slowing rate of growth among college-aged students is expected to have the greatest impact in regions like the Northeast and Midwest, where states like Connecticut (-14.4%), Illinois (-16.6%), and West Virginia (-18.6%) are each expected to experience double-digit population declines by 2050.
Conversely, the cohort of college-aged students is expected to increase in the Southeast in states like Florida (24.5%) and Georgia (15.3%) and in Mountain West states like Colorado (25.2%) and Nevada (24.8%) that have more remote populations.
What's next for higher education?

Public universities and smaller schools, particularly those that aren't centers of research or athletic powerhouses, may also be at risk.
Some universities have already recalibrated in light of enrollment declines and budget cuts. In Pennsylvania, the state redesigned its university system by consolidating institutions, creating two regional universities out of six existing universities in the western and northeastern parts of the state. Enrollment has declined in these areas in recent decades, with more students opting to enroll in online classes instead of living on campus.
While some smaller colleges and universities with consistently declining enrollment might be at risk of closing in the coming years, the could be the biggest change in American institutions, according to a report by the Brookings Institute.
Public universities in states where growth among young people is expected to slow or decline will likely be the hardest hit by the demographic trend, with some already making cuts.
West Virginia University announced it was cutting around 5% of faculty positions and dropping 28 of its majors as the state university grapples with a and a 10% decline in enrollment since 2015, the Associated Press reported.
Deep cuts also were made at St. Cloud State University, one of the largest schools in Minnesota, where full-time student enrollment has dropped by more than half since 2010. The university made drastic budget reductions to its music department among cuts to 42 majors, eliminated its football team, and reduced its faculty by 54 members.
Whether large or small, college towns across the country often serve as hubs of employment in the area. Closures or drastic cuts to the institutions that anchor these towns will likely harm the local economies.
Only time will tell how higher education will fare amid drastic shifts. Amid ongoing demographic changes, cuts will likely continue for the foreseeable future.
Story editing by Alizah Salario. Additional editing by Kelly Glass. Copy editing by Paris Close. Photo selection by Ania Antecka.
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