China grows as study hotspot for US students (International Herald Tribune) Updated: 2005-12-08 08:51 China's rise as an economic powerhouse is
resulting in a rapid expansion of its system of higher education, making it the
fastest-growing destination for American foreign exchange students, a study has
found.
The number of American students seeking higher education in China
has never been greater, increasing by 90 percent from 2002 to 2004, according to
the study by the Institute of International Education, a research organization
based in New York.
At the same time, increasing numbers of Chinese
students are attracted by university training in the United States, solidifying
America's position as the top destination for Chinese students abroad, according
to the study, which was financed by the U.S. State Department.
Alan
Goodman, president of the institute, ties the phenomenon to the pace of change
in China, which is spending billions of dollars to expand and transform its
higher educational facilities into world-class institutions.
"This is a
real measure of the impact of globalization," Goodman said during a recent visit
to Paris during which he highlighted the study's results on China. "The only way
an American student is going to understand what a Chinese student might think
about our country and its policies is to sit next to one in class."
The
building spree in China is helping fuel student visits by Americans and other
foreigners, drawn by the better facilities now available and by the prospect of
gaining expertise in the world's most populous country.
A total of 4,737
American students enrolled in Chinese universities in the 2003-2004 academic
year, the institute's study found, up from 2,493 students the previous
year.
The jump in enrollment stems in part from a rebound in study in
East Asia following the SARS epidemic, which closed down several programs in
spring and summer 2003. Just before that severe acute respiratory syndrome
outbreak, however, the number of American students studying in China increased
at a faster rate than any of the other top 15 destination countries, rising 33
percent from 2000 to 2001. The enrollment figures this year are 21 percent
higher than the pre-SARS mark.
China now ranks ninth as a host
destination for American students, advancing from the No. 12 spot a year
earlier. Britain continues to be the leading destination, attracting 16.8
percent of all American students who study abroad, the study found.
Jobs
are an important consideration for American students heading to China, according
to Chih-Ping Chou, professor of East Asian Studies at Princeton
University.
"China is a job market," Chou said. "Twenty years ago only
those interested in Chinese literature would study Chinese language. Now all
professions have opened up."
For Chinese students in America, training in
the United States has benefits beyond exposure to a new culture.
"Chinese
students are more competitive if they've studied in the U.S.," Denise Chu,
overseas program manager for the Center of East Asian Studies at Stanford
University, said by telephone.
"The Chinese government has a lot of
incentive programs to recruit Chinese students once they've studied in the
U.S.," he said. "They can get a higher salary and a better future."
In
the 2004-2005 academic year, China sent more than 62,000 students to the United
States, nearly 60 percent more than a decade earlier, the study showed. The
Chinese now represent 11 percent of foreign students in the United States, the
second-largest group behind students from India, according to the
study.
Nationwide in China, the number of students enrolled in higher
education has more than doubled in less than five years. In 2000, the country
counted 5.8 million university students; by 2004, that number had rocketed to
13.3 million.
But for some, quick growth does not necessarily translate
into top-class education, and this is one reason why some Chinese students
enroll abroad.
"I came to the U.S. because I think the quality of higher
education is much better here," said Tao Xie, a fifth-year Chinese graduate
student of American politics at Northwestern University.
"China's
educational system is undergoing fundamental changes at the moment," Xie added.
"But it still has a long way to go."
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