International students comprise a growing percentage of undergraduates at U.S. colleges and universities. California, New York, Texas, Massachusetts, Illinois, Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ohio are leading destinations.
These are some popular schools for international students. Each schools has either a large undergraduate international student population, or international students comprise a relatively large percentage of the degree-seeking undergraduate student body.
- Amherst College (Massachusetts)
- Babson College (Massachusetts)
- Bard College (New York)
- Brandeis University (Massachusetts)
- Brown University (Rhode Island)
- Boston University (Massachusetts)
- Bryn Mawr College (Pennsylvania)
- California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
- Carnegie Mellon University (Pennsylvania)
- College of the Atlantic (Maine)
- Columbia University (New York)
- Cornell University (New York)
- Cooper Union (New York)
- Florida Institute of Technology
- Franklin and Marshall College (Pennsylvania)
- Harvard University
- Illinois Institute of Technology
- Lynn University (Boca Raton, Florida)
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
- Middlebury College (Vermont)
- Mount Holyoke College (Massachusetts)
- New Jersey Institute of Technology
- New York University (New York)
- New School (New York)
- Northeastern University
- Polytechnic Institute of New York
- Princeton University (New Jersey)
- Purdue (Indiana)
- Smith College (Massachusetts)
- Rice University (Texas)
- State University of New York (Buffalo)
- University of Bridgeport (Connecticut)
- University of Chicago (Illinois)
- University of Illinois
- University of Miami (Florida)
- University of Pennsylvania
- University of Southern California
- University of Tulsa (Oklahoma)
- University of Rochester (New York)
- Wellesley College (Massachusetts)
- Worcester Polytechnic Institute
- Yale University (Connecticut)
Lynn Radlauer Lubell, Publisher of InLikeMe.com and Founder of Admission By Design, an Educational Consultancy based in Boca Raton, Florida.