Jennifer Parungao and Hossam Shahin, both 19, are international students at Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey
This is the VOA Special English Education Report. 
 
Last week, we told how some international students have few friends in  their host country when they study overseas. One study in the United  States found that thirty-eight percent of foreign students said they had  no close American friends. Communications specialist Elisabeth Gareis  studied more than four hundred fifty foreign students.
 
VOA Student Union blogger Jessica Stahl also investigated the issue.  Her survey showed that seventy-five percent of foreign students said  they have more than two American friends. But ten percent reported  having no American friends.
 
Elisabeth Gareis teaches in the Department of Communication Studies at  Baruch College in New York. She says efforts on how to improve  relationships between the two groups of students have yet to be studied  in detail. But she says these efforts should begin with the college or  university, and that these institutions have been working harder.
 
ELISABETH GARIES: “Institutions should build an infrastructure that  promotes contact. And they can do that by, for example, bonding  activities at the beginning of the academic year.”
 
She suggests taking walks, going on bicycle, field or camping trips,  and attending parties, sporting events or film festivals. She says such  activities should be held repeatedly to bring students together  throughout the school term. Ms. Gareis also suggests that foreign  students share housing with American students.
 
Michigan State University is known for its programs for international  students. Last year, about five thousand nine hundred students from one  hundred thirty three countries attended Michigan State. They made up  perhaps twelve percent of the total university population. Peter Briggs  directs the Office for International Students and Scholars at Michigan  State. He says more foreign students are expected to register this week.
 
Many students and community members are trained and prepared to help  foreign students. The volunteers assist new students as they complete  government requirements and find their academic advisors. Mr. Briggs  says the volunteers also help answer the traditional questions of new  people anywhere.
 
PETER BRIGGS:  “Where do I get an ID (identification card)? Which is  the best bank…What is my cell phone plan? How do I get a Social Security  number or driver’s license? That kind of information is shared both  formally and informally as students advise other students. We’re really  supporting that network.”
 
He says that if the new students make friends as they begin school,  they will come to feel part of the life and traditions of the  university.
 
And that’s the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Jerilyn  Watson. To read and listen to more stories for people learning English,  go to voaspecialenglish.com. I’m Steve Ember.
  	
