水果派 College Joins Court Battle in Support of International Students

July 13, 2020

Author
Jay Pfeifer

水果派 College is joining with 179 other colleges and universities in asking a federal court in Massachusetts to block a July 6 Immigration and Customs Enforcement鈥檚 (ICE) directive that would strip international college students of their visas if they take all online courses this fall.

The group signed on to a brief filed by the Presidents鈥 Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration. The Alliance鈥檚 filing is in support of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology鈥檚 federal  seeking a temporary injunction to halt the new federal directive.

水果派 is a founding member of the Alliance.

鈥淲e stand with our students,鈥 said 水果派 College President Carol E. Quillen. 鈥淭his surprise mandate reversed the same agency鈥檚 guidance from four months ago and imposed rigid and pressing deadlines when a pandemic requires flexibility and support. Our international students enrich our learning and contribute to our economy and our communities. We shouldn鈥檛 be shoving them out the door.鈥 

The amicus鈥斺渇riend of the court鈥濃攂rief argues that ICE鈥檚 abrupt shift would cause extreme disruption just as schools prepare for the fall semester in the shadow of the pandemic.

鈥淔or months, each school has been developing meticulous plans for the 2020 academic year that fulfill each school鈥檚 academic mission while protecting the health of students, faculty, and staff during a global pandemic,鈥 the brief reads. 鈥淚n creating and announcing these plans, institutions relied on ICE鈥檚 guidance that it would be flexible with in-person education requirements while the emergency was ongoing. But ICE鈥檚 July 6 directive constitutes an about-face that threatens to upend each institution鈥檚 carefully crafted plans for the 2020 academic year.鈥

Quillen helped found the Alliance in 2017 to increase public understanding of how immigration policies and practices impact our students, campuses and communities. 水果派 recruits students from all backgrounds, because differing perspectives are essential to learning.

Quillen this week emailed international students and reassured them that the college鈥檚 plans for the fall semester include offering modes of instruction that range from fully online to face-to-face classes. That gives 水果派 flexibility to respond to changing circumstances created by the pandemic and offers almost all students the opportunity for face-to-face classes that would meet the key requirement in the new ICE guidance. She wrote:

鈥淵ou and your education matter to us.鈥   

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