Welcome To DailyEducation

DailyEducation is an open-source platform for educational updates and sharing knowledge with the World of Everyday students.

How China has been transforming international education to become a leading host of students

Educator

New member
file-20210512-22-c8cyib.jpg



When Australians think of international education and China, they typically consider the country as a source of international students — . But China is now of international students in the world.

China’s level of over the past decade, backed up by strategic priorities, has been unprecedented.

My recently published shows Chinese universities are learning to reconcile the different forces of local, national and global demands. They aim to:


  • calibrate to the Chinese government’s grand scheme of


  • expand their global reach and market influence


  • enhance their professional impact and managerial efficiency


  • respond to the community repercussions of growing numbers of international students.

A top study destination in the making​


China was on the way to becoming a top destination for studying abroad well before the COVID-19 pandemic.

By 2018, studied in mainland China. They were enrolled in 1,004 higher education institutions.

International student numbers had , when 238,184 were enrolled. Back in 1978 the total was a mere 1,236.



Read more:



The Initiative, Liuxue zhongguo jihua, first appeared in 2010 in the .

The growth of the initiative over the past decade echoes across China’s laws, five-year plans, guidelines and action plans, and government decisions, opinions, regulations, notices and explanations.

2010 was a turning point​


Between 2007 and 2009, the Chinese Ministry of Education had signalled against reckless pursuit of international student enrolments at the expense of quality education. This was a fleeting period of slight uncertainty for the sector.

In 2010, state policymaking re-endorsed mass international education in China. Study in China was to be built into a global education brand.

The plan specified annual enrolment targets, culminating in 500,000 students in 2020. This included 150,000 degree-seeking students. Yearly targets were set to develop exemplary sites, programs and courses for international education.

The overall goal was to make China by the end of the decade. This was achieved in 2017-2018.

Subsequent state policies focused on legal, financial and administrative improvements. Increasing funding was made available through national, local, government and corporate scholarships and stipends for international students.

Education’s place in a broader global strategy​


The mid-2010s defined the orientation of international education in China. The Study in China Initiative was subsumed under the new global strategy, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). It is a “road map” for China’s higher education to step onto the world stage.



Read more:



Study in China is part of the core political discourse of national rejuvenation.

We can see this in the official 2019 . The guide depicts the BRI as a core strength and essential knowledge about China. It powerfully demonstrates China’s market aspirations and appeal to international students.


The official Study in China Guide makes it clear international education is part of the Belt and Road Initiative.

The Chinese government’s sponsors 10,000 new international students a year from countries participating in the Belt and Road Initiative. Universities can apply for state funding to run a BRI talent development site for large cohorts of these students.

Research grant schemes fund studies that improve the quality of international education, while supporting BRI work in infrastructure, trade, culture and diplomacy.

The Belt and Road Initiative is central to China’s rapid shift from major importer to rising exporter of international education. In 2017, 317,200 , 64.85% of the total.

Focus shifts to quality assurance​


Quality improvement was not new in the policy discourse on Study in China. However, substantive progress has been made since 2017.

Compared to its 2000 version, the 2017 Administrative Measures for the Enrolment and Development of International Students by Universities and Schools (Order 42) emphasised systematic quality enhancement in four areas:


  • development of relevant university regulations


  • rigorous assessments for admissions and scholarships


  • systematic planning of teaching and staff development


  • development of quality control mechanisms.

The 2018 Quality Assurance Standards for Higher Education of International Students is the first of its kind in China. The 2019 Quality Accreditation Rules for International Higher Education established China’s first external qualification accreditation and assurance system for international education.

One quality indicator concerns the composition of international students. Degree-seeking students became the majority (52.44%) of international students in China for the first time in 2018. Their numbers had increased by more than 350% from 36,387 in 2006 to . They include bachelor, master and doctoral students who study abroad for at least one year.

university graduates in academic gowns seen from the back

International students enrolled for degrees in China increased in number by more than 350% from 2006 to 2018.

A balancing act for Chinese universities​


Chinese universities have benefited from the escalating scale and influence of the Study in China Initiative.

However, my shows they are under the stress of having to respond to multiple, often competing pressures.

An example of this is academic language and associated ideological tension. English is the dominant language in the academic world and in global trade. Most international students in Chinese universities study in English-taught programs.

But shifting political and community perceptions of the English language have stepped up internal pressures on Chinese universities. The legitimacy of English as the of global knowledge production is under challenge.



Read more:



Another clear policy shift encourages convergent management of domestic and international students. There is pressure to integrate international students into the regular operations of Chinese universities. The rise in international student numbers has created a need to increase managerial efficiency.

This shift is also a response to community perception. International students benefit from more flexible testing arrangements and greater access to elite universities and scholarships, compared to domestic students. International students are spared the , the national college entrance examination.

In addition, breaches of rules and regulations by international students have often gone unaddressed.

Chinese universities are having to weigh up competing considerations of state aspiration, market appeal, corporate consolidation, professional enhancement and community pressures.

The Conversation

Jing Qi does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
 
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock