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Shanghai boosts education services with new class acts

2013-10-24 16:31:26

(China Daily) By WANG HONGYI

 

Its model of education and international courses has drawn attention from Chinese students and education experts. This year, about 500 Chinese students took part in the first round of admission interviews, with 151 eventually accepted.

The city is also encouraging universities to carry out more high-caliber programs with overseas institutes.

In 2006, Shanghai Jiao Tong University and the University of Michigan announced a joint venture to cultivate mechanical engineering expertise. It is one of the first international higher education institutes in China modeled after top US research universities in terms of academic environment, faculty quality, research opportunities and educational program guidelines.

The course systems were based on the University of Michigan system, joint bilingual teaching by Chinese and foreign teachers, mutual recognition of academic credits, and an innovative education system adapted to the global environment and its graduates.

The cooperative program has proved to be a great success and has also been recognized as an innovative model of China-US collaborative education for training worldclass talent.

"The cooperation program was a successful example of promoting China's higher education development and talents' training," education official Yang said.

Hua Ouyang is a professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University's School of Mechanical Engineering and taught in a cooperative program between the university and the US' Purdue University.

"The joint-teaching mode is beneficial; different culture, different thinking modes," he said, adding that combined education methods help both foreign and Chinese students learn more from each other.

Education goal

The next step for the city's education authorities, according to Yang, is to establish a cooperative vocational school. The education commission is looking for qualified international bodies for cooperation, he said.

Shanghai has more than 220 China-overseas cooperative education bodies and programs. It plans to add another 40 by 2015.

"We don't want to expand quickly. Our goal is to create fine education," Yang said.

The number of international students in the city has been rising. Last year, about 51,000 overseas students were studying in Shanghai, most from South Korea, Japan and the US.

City authorities hope that number will increase to 70,000, about 40 percent, by 2015.

In recent years, the city has announced a series of favorable policies and scholarships to encourage more outstanding foreign students to study at its universities.

Shanghai has been offering scholarships to international students since 2005, and more than 25 million yuan ($4 million) is granted to students each year, Yang said.

According to a Shanghai Education Commission development plan, the city will establish a comprehensive scholarship system to attract outstanding students. "Only a third of foreign students in Shanghai are in long-term degree programs," Yang explained. "We hope more outstanding foreign students can study for longer education programs, which last more than half a year."

This year, the commission set up a website-study-shanghai.org-in Chinese, English, Japanese and Korean for international students to apply for government scholarships.

The website also provides information about summer school courses, open classes, lectures and international exchange programs, as well as information about the city.

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