How many undocumented students are enrolled at US colleges?

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More than 500,000 undocumented students enrolled in higher education in the U.S. in 2023, according to a new report from the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration and the American Immigration Council. 

They pursue a range of programs and often seek advanced degrees — allowing them to advance scientific innovation, become business leaders and improve the campus community, the report stated. 

However, the U.S. Department of Justice under the Trump administration has now filed lawsuits against five states, arguing that their policies allowing in-state tuition for certain undocumented students are illegal. Courts have struck down those policies already in Texas and Oklahoma, with the support of the states’ attorneys general.

That’s left undocumented students uncertain whether they will be able to access in-state tuition down the road, potentially affecting whether they enroll at college, said Corinne Kentor, manager of research and policy at the Presidents’ Alliance in an email. 

Along with targeting in-state tuition rates, the Trump administration has taken several other actions to crack down on undocumented immigrants and potentially make it harder for them to pursue higher education. 

President Donald Trump, for instance, signed an executive order in January to review government grants and contracts to organizations that directly or indirectly support or provide services undocumented immigrants. And, in July, the U.S. Department of Education moved to prevent undocumented students from accessing federal funding for career, technical and adult education programs, as well as dual-enrollment programs.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration has launched a mass deportation campaign that has taken an emotional toll on undocumented students, who are fearing for themselves, their families and their loved ones, Kentor said.

In January, the administration also rescinded a 2021 memo that largely prevented immigration enforcement officers from carrying out deportation missions in certain areas, such as churches, schools and hospitals. 

The rescission of that memo, coupled with heightened scrutiny of the higher education sector by the Trump administration, in general, has “compromised students’ trust in the safety of their institutions,” said Kentor

Some students may have family members who have been detained, deported or lost income due to workplace raids, Kentor said. That could force undocumented students to take on additional financial or caregiving responsibilities. 

“As immigration enforcement efforts intensify, students contend with daily decisions about how to navigate life on and off campus,” said Kentor.

Attack on in-state tuition policies

Undocumented students are mostly concentrated in a small number of states, the report found. 

Nearly 103,000 undocumented students are enrolled at colleges in California, about 73,000 undocumented students attend institutions in Texas, roughly 49,000 in Florida, over 31,000 in New York, and nearly 28,000 in Illinois, according to the report, which is based on U.S. Census data.

About three-quarters of undocumented students attend public institutions.

Roughly 15% of all undocumented students are working towards advanced degrees. Of the students currently enrolled at a graduate school, nearly 29% hold an undergraduate degree in a STEM field. 

Local immigration enforcement efforts and state tuition policies affect whether students can pursue advanced degrees. At the start of the year, 25 states and Washington, D.C. had policies that allowed certain undocumented students to pay in-state tuition rates. 

But in June, a federal judge struck down Texas’s 24-year-old policy after the state’s attorney general, Ken Paxton, backed a Trump administration lawsuit challenging the law’s legality. 

In August, the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education, which implements the state’s in-state tuition policy for certain undocumented students, asked the court to declare it unconstitutional following a similar DOJ lawsuit.

Danielle McLean

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