HomeOpinionOp-EdImmigration bill would help keep STEM grad students in U.S. — but...

Immigration bill would help keep STEM grad students in U.S. — but must include more majors

Robert J. Jones is chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. – University of Illinois

In 1958, a young Israeli doctoral student came to Berkeley, California, to study psychology. He   eventually spent most of his career in the U.S. The student’s name was Daniel Kahneman, and he helped to create the field of behavioral economics, won a Nobel Prize and became an inspiration to many Americans — from scholars and policy-makers to CEOs and baseball executives.

American doctoral programs remain magnets for talent. Our universities attract the best and brightest from around the world, just as they did in 1958. The next generation of Danny Kahnemans are here now, not just in psychology, but in a wide variety of other fields. They can make our country stronger, and we should keep them in the U.S. if we can.

President Joe Biden’s administration has a comprehensive immigration reform bill now before Congress. It would go a long way toward fixing our broken system, including making it easier for certain science, technology, engineering and mathematics graduate students to stay in America. That is a smart first step, but the current bill is narrower than it should be. It does not, for example, apply to the field of psychology, so it would not have helped the young Danny Kahneman. That is a mistake.

The challenges facing America are complex. Tackling them requires many skillsets. Yes, America needs computer scientists, physicists and engineers, but we also need agricultural economists, humanists and psychologists. We should be trying to keep far more of the exceptional doctoral talent we are cultivating at America’s research universities.

For example: Historians and philosophers will help to guide the civic conversations required to bridge social differences and restore public trust. Agronomists and natural resource experts are key to addressing our most pressing global challenges, from food insecurity to climate change.  Sociologists, anthropologists and area studies experts provide knowledge crucial to navigating international crises. To address the next pandemic effectively, we need behavioral scientists and experts in global health, infectious disease, immunology and virology, as well as computer modelers.

Of course, academia is only one arena where international Ph.D. recipients can contribute to our society. Students with doctorates in agriculture, for example, are future leaders in food services or agricultural production throughout business, government and the nonprofit world. People with doctorates in the humanities will fortify America’s cultural institutions, and graduates with natural resources degrees are poised to lead in wildlife conservation or management.

We know these fields are important: American research universities already make a huge investment in their doctoral students across all disciplines. These students in turn make critical contributions to address the great challenges of our day. Many want to stay, and we should want them to do so.

We also have the evidence of history to guide us. We have built the most admired, most productive and most inclusive higher educational system in the world over the past century. This system has been the driver of unmatched educational opportunity and social and economic growth and prosperity. We should stay the course, pushing forward along a proven road to America’s sustained success.

This is the moment to act. For the past four years, we watched with alarm as the federal government — in ways large and small — jammed the gears of the legal immigration system and made it increasingly difficult for law-abiding immigrants to work, live and study in the U.S.

We are heartened by the Biden administration’s recent measures to undo this damage, including restoring the DACA program. The president’s Executive Order tasking agencies to adopt a more sensible and hospitable immigration system sets exactly the right tone.

These are important and essential actions, but we must do more to attract and retain the world’s best talent. Making it easier for doctoral students to work and live in the U.S. will encourage extraordinary people to study here and to contribute to our society after they graduate.

American history has demonstrated that one of our country’s greatest strengths is the ability to attract superb talent from throughout the world. We see that talent all around us at our universities. Do we want these remarkable doctoral candidates to stay and contribute to our society after we have trained them? You bet we do, and we look forward to working with the administration and Congress to make that possible.

Christopher L. Eisgruber is president of Princeton University. Robert J. Jones is chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Related Articles

Grant supports 37 postdoctoral researchers at three Rutgers schools

Rutgers University has received a $1.5 million grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to support 37 postdoctoral researchers across 12 scientific disciplines. The...

Rowan University and Gloucester County given $1.9M for research and roadwork

Rowan University and Gloucester County were given $1.9 million in community project funding to support the research, development and testing of concrete 3D-printed housing...

Stockton University to add academic program options this Fall

Stockton University announced this week that it will offer new options within its degree programs beginning in the Fall 2026 semester in health science,...

Mercer County to buy land from Rider University for $8.5M

Rider University President John Loyack, CPA, MBA, Mercer County Executive Dan Benson and the Mercer County board of commissioners announced that the county has...

Morris Educational Foundation awards $11K in grants to Morris School District 

The Morris Educational Foundation (MEF) announced a new round of grants totaling $11,600 has been awarded to enrich the educational experience of students in...

State of the Union should put patients first — not price controls that threaten innovation | Op-Ed

In his State of the Union address, the President spoke about the urgent need to lower prescription drug costs for American families, a goal...

Latest Articles

00:01:07

Sherrill highlights N.J.’s life sciences leadership at HINJ forum

Gov. Mikie Sherrill touted New Jersey’s leadership in the life sciences industry during a forum hosted by the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey on...

Norman’s Hallmark opens 10th N.J. location in Woodbridge

Norman’s Hallmark has increased its Garden State footprint with the opening of a new store at Cloverleaf Shopping Center. The grocery-anchored retail center is located...

Appwork of Ramsey announces another $7M investment to advance multifamily maintenance solutions 

AppWork, a property technology platform helping multifamily owners and operators eliminate maintenance backlogs and improve resident satisfaction, on March 16 announced the raise of...

Schuman Cheese sees fourth-generation leadership changes

Fairfield-based Schuman Cheese, a fourth-generation family-owned company and leading importer and distributor of specialty cheeses in North America, announced several changes in its leadership...

NAI DiLeo-Bram completes 20,000 SF in office leases in select Central Jersey market

NAI DiLeo-Bram & Co. recently completed four office leases totaling 20,000 square feet in the Middlesex County market. Helmed by Executive Vice President Robert Dinner, the deals span...

Grant supports 37 postdoctoral researchers at three Rutgers schools

Rutgers University has received a $1.5 million grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to support 37 postdoctoral researchers across 12 scientific disciplines. The...

Latest Articles

Sherrill highlights N.J.’s life sciences leadership at HINJ forum

Gov. Mikie Sherrill touted New Jersey’s leadership in the life sciences industry during a forum hosted by the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey on...

Norman’s Hallmark opens 10th N.J. location in Woodbridge

Norman’s Hallmark has increased its Garden State footprint with the opening of a new store at Cloverleaf Shopping Center. The grocery-anchored retail center is located...

Appwork of Ramsey announces another $7M investment to advance multifamily maintenance solutions 

AppWork, a property technology platform helping multifamily owners and operators eliminate maintenance backlogs and improve resident satisfaction, on March 16 announced the raise of...

Schuman Cheese sees fourth-generation leadership changes

Fairfield-based Schuman Cheese, a fourth-generation family-owned company and leading importer and distributor of specialty cheeses in North America, announced several changes in its leadership...

NAI DiLeo-Bram completes 20,000 SF in office leases in select Central Jersey market

NAI DiLeo-Bram & Co. recently completed four office leases totaling 20,000 square feet in the Middlesex County market. Helmed by Executive Vice President Robert Dinner, the deals span...