Ghanaian students continue to choose the United States (US) as a top destination for higher education.
According to the 2022 Open Doors Report, 4,916 Ghanaian students studied at U.S. colleges and universities during the most recent (2021-2022) academic year.
This, according to the U.S. Embassy in Ghana, represents a 16 percent increase over the previous year and continues a long-term growth trend among Ghanaian students.
“U.S. higher educational institutions offer world-class learning experiences. Our team has worked hard to help students with the application, admission, and visa process this year. We are so proud that more Ghanaian students are choosing the United States.”
U.S. Ambassador to Ghana, Virginia Palmer
Ghanaian students studied at 700 U.S. colleges and universities in all 50 U.S. states in 2021-2022. Among Sub-Saharan African countries, Ghana sends the second-highest number of students (second only to Nigeria). Ghana also now ranks 18th in the world for countries sending students to the United States for graduate programs.
Following the COVID-19 pandemic, new international student enrollment in the United States rebounded this year – the total number of international students enrolled in U.S. institutions increased four percent. The United States remains the top destination for international education with over 948,000 students enrolled.
EducationUSA providing reliable information
Ghanaian student, Philip De-Graft, a freshman at Stetson University in DeLand, Florida, is a member of the school’s Presidential and Bonner Scholar programs. Philip is the first person in his family to attend university.
“EducationUSA provided me with reliable information and helped me to select my best fit institution. From test preparation to essay review, to the visa process and pre-departure orientation, we had a great relationship. Even after helping me land a full scholarship, EducationUSA’s Opportunity Fund Program helped me pay for the application fee and travel costs”.
Philip De-Graft
Mohammed Mabrouk Halid was completing his national service at Ghana’s Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning, when he met an alumnus of a U.S. university. Soon enough, with the help of EducationUSA, he was applying for graduate programs in the United States. After graduating as a Master of Arts in Finance from Webster University (St. Louis, Missouri), he is now a PhD candidate at University of the Cumberlands.
“Success is a journey, not a destination.”
Mohammed Mabrouk Halid
The U.S. Embassy worked closely with prospective students over the past year, helping students accepted to U.S. colleges and universities navigate the visa process and other preparations. The U.S. Embassy processed more than 7,000 student visa cases in the last fiscal year – breaking all previous records.
Through EducationUSA, the U.S. Department of State’s network of education advisers, the U.S. Embassy has continued to engage prospective Ghanaian students. Through online and in-person information sessions this year, EducationUSA has reached more than 200,000 Ghanaian students, including nearly 3,000 students who attended EducationUSA’s College Fair in Accra in September 2022. EducationUSA maintains Advising Centers in Accra and Kumasi for virtual and in-person student advising.
This week, a team from the U.S. Embassy is visiting Tamale, Northern Region and Bolgatanga, Upper East Region as part of the American Spaces and EducationUSA Roadshow. With events in both cities, from November 14 through November 17, 2022, the team will engage local entrepreneurs in training sessions, as well as local students to provide information on studying in the United States.
READ ALSO: It Is The Collective Responsibility Of The World To Change Global Financial Architecture- Jinapor