AMHERST - On a $1,300 monthly allowance, Ahmed Siddig, a University of Massachusetts Amherst international PhD student, is figuring out how to spend his money this month. He has his wife with him, he has to pay his $800 rent, and he is also expecting a baby this April.
Coming from Darfur, Sudan, where the currency rate is three times lower, Siddig starts to get unsure if he could stand in such financial difficulty for three more years.
Siddig with his wife, Isra |
Siddig, 28, is one of the 1288 international UMass students who came from the developing nations, and struggling to make ends meet on scholarship and assistantship.
As a highly ranked public school for graduate studies, UMass often attracts graduate students from developing nations who are looking for an inexpensive high quality education.
However, because of the significant disparities with their home countries, often these students find themselves stuck in between the dream for better graduate education in the United States, and the pressing economic reality.
International graduate students make up 25 percent of the UMass graduate student population, and 75 percent of the entire international student population.
Most of the graduate students come with families, and often the scholarship does not cover their living expenses. Some must work two to three additional jobs, while carrying the burden of intensive graduate classes.
To those who do not come with families, they have to go through the stress alone.