Barbecue, spicy noodles on new job training menu

Vocational colleges meet demands of business, local economies

By HE CHUN in Changsha,LIU KUN in Wuhan and ZHENG JINRAN | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2026-04-22 07:40
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Students learn key techniques for preparing braised crayfish in a training kitchen of the crayfish college in Qianjiang, Hubei province. [Photo provided to CHINA DAILY]

Clawing ahead

Located in Qianjiang, a city known as China's "crayfish capital", the crayfish industry college was founded as the local industry surged in recent decades.

By 2017, the city's crayfish sector exceeded 10 billion yuan in total output value, employing over 100,000 workers and creating strong demand for skilled employees.

However, the idea of a crayfish college was initially met with widespread skepticism, with critics dismissing it as gimmicky, said Xu Jiangeng, the college's dean.

That perception shifted quickly.

"The turning point came with our first graduating class," he said. "Employment rates were near 100 percent, and graduates were immediately absorbed across the industry."

Today, graduates work across the supply chain, including restaurant chains, aquaculture cooperatives, and related businesses, he added.

He Yanjun, who enrolled in the crayfish college in 2022 and graduated in 2025, said the program's immersive approach is appealing. "The most interesting part is turning a live crayfish into a signature dish, and then building a menu around it," he said. "You're involved in the entire process, from (the cooking) technique to the business end."

The college rotates students through all aspects of the industry. They spend time in aquaculture ponds, restaurant kitchens, and front-of-house operations. "The best way to understand the industry is to see it end-to-end," He said.

After graduating, he initially earned around 6,000 yuan per month, with seasonal bonuses bringing his annual income to about 80,000 yuan. He has since opened his own restaurant and now earns more than 200,000 yuan a year.

"What helped me most was learning how to think about the industry as a whole," he said. "The college doesn't just teach you how to cook — it teaches you how to run a business."

The strong employment outcomes of such programs have been a key driver of their expansion and helped reshape public perception about the worth of vocational education.

"The biggest difference is that these industry colleges teach exactly what the industry needs," said Hao Yanliang, director of the employment and entrepreneurship guidance center at Jianghan Art Vocational College, which is home to the crayfish industry college.

"Students graduate as 'ready workers' who can immediately create value," Hao said.

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