With admission season still in full swing, 25 of America's largest research universities have already sent more than 500 acceptance letters to students from the six affected countries, according to data provided by schools in response to Associated Press requests.
The vast majority of those students are from Iran, where undergraduate programs are known for their strength in engineering and computer sciences.
"For us to not have access to that talent pool is a major, major blow. It is unimaginable in schools of engineering across the country to lose that talent," said Kazem Kazerounian, dean of the School of Engineering at the University of Connecticut, which has accepted 15 Iranian students so far.
The new uncertainty has steered some students to other nations that compete with the US for top students, including Canada, Australia and Japan, officials at some schools say.
At the University of Central Florida, a third of the 115 students who have been accepted to graduate programmes in civil and electrical engineering for next fall are from Iran.
Iranian student Amir Soleimani, 26, has been accepted to two universities in the US, where he wants to pursue a doctorate in electrical engineering and continue his research on artificial intelligence.
"My future is very dependent on this ban," said Soleimani, who lives in the city of Mashhad and has a master's in electrical engineering from the University of Tehran.
"We have spent lots of our time and our energy to apply to top universities, and now that we have been admitted to these universities, it is very disastrous to see we may be banned.
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