Opinion / Hot Talks |
Should Beida recruit more recommended students?By Zhang Xi (chinadaily.com.cn)Updated: 2007-07-09 16:37 Beida plans to enroll 4,300 postgraduates and 1,400 doctorial students this year, but not all college graduates can go there by taking an entrance exam. The prestigious university will focus on recruiting those who do not need to sit exams, but instead rely on the recommendations of the colleges where they received their bachelor degrees. The plan shows of the prospective postgraduates studying sciences, 50 to 80
percent of them will be recommended. And at least half of the new postgraduates
in other departments will also be recommended to Beida. In total, the university
will enroll seven percent more recommended students than last year. As a result,
only a few prospective postgraduates can enter In the past, half of those recommended students were from Beida, and the
other came from other post secondary institutions. A student at "I didn't do well in my college entrance exam four years ago," says Li Chen,
a graduate at a university outside Professor Wen Rumin has worked as a postgraduate supervisor for a long time in Beida's Chinese Department. He says, "The university is doing the right thing since some prospective postgraduates are only good at taking exams rather than academic studies." He believes the academic levels of recommended students are higher than their counterparts who come to Beida by taking exams. Wen did not think the recruitment policy is unfair because the most important goals of postgraduate education are guaranteeing the teaching quality and selecting qualified talent. Other supervisors think many students come to Beida by taking the entrance exam and only want to get a degree from Beida rather than really study a subject. From this aspect, they are not as good as those recommended students, who are more welcomed by supervisors. An educator and professor at |
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