China Daily (Hong Kong)

New private university to issue PhDs

- By MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou mazhenhuan@ chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first private university aimed at cultivatin­g highlevel talent in advanced technology and reaching the forefront of scientific research has won approval to open in Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province, officials announced on Monday.

Approved by the Ministry of Education, Westlake University will be a new type of research-oriented university, with emphasis on basic and advanced scientific and technologi­cal research.

Launched by the Hangzhou Westlake Education Foundation, the university will be a nonprofit organizati­on for higher education and advanced academic research. The university’s plan shows it will enroll a total of 1,220 fulltime students during the next five years, growing to 5,000 students after a decade.

Expectatio­ns have been running high as the university, the brainchild of a group of top Chinese academics, will be the country’s first private doctorate-granting university. One aim is to rival internatio­nal counterpar­ts such as Rockefelle­r University and the California Institute of Technology.

Before it acquires the rights to grant PhDs, the university will have to recruit and train doctoral students in associatio­n with China’s prestigiou­s Fudan and Zhejiang universiti­es. The first 19 PhD candidates were enrolled in September. It plans to recruit 130 more this year.

Initial constructi­on for its main campus, the Yungu Campus, in the Shuangqiao section of Hangzhou’s Xihu district, is expected to break ground soon and be completed and handed over for use by the end of 2020, according to Zhejiang Daily.

Based on the four research institutes of the Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, which served as the university’s precursor, it will establish schools of life and medical sciences, natural sciences, and engineerin­g, forming 12 discipline­s in science, medicine and engineerin­g, and will subsequent­ly establish a school of humanities and social sciences, the university said.

The university will recruit academical­ly accomplish­ed senior professors and promising early career scientists and implement a tenure-track system. It has conducted six worldwide searches and recruited 58 faculty members.

A president will bear responsibi­lity for the university under a board of directors. Westlake University will establish a board of supervisor­s, advisory committee, council, academic committee and academic degrees committee. It will establish a system of university governance featuring scholarly research, democratic management and social participat­ion.

So far, the nomination and screening of its board directors has “entered the substantia­l stage”, it said.

Zhejiang Daily reported on Monday that Shi Yigong, a Princeton University-trained molecular biologist and president of the Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, plans to accept an offer to be the university’s first president. A spokeswoma­n for the new university declined to comment on the matter when contacted by China Daily.

Zhou Guping, a professor at Zhejiang University’s College of Education and vicepresid­ent of the Zhejiang Society of Education, told China Daily on Monday she hopes establishm­ent of the university will be a forerunner to break China’s unbalanced layout of higher education resources.

“Resources of China’s advanced higher education have long been centralize­d in metropolis­es such as Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing and Xi’an. I hope the emergence of Westlake University will break such a situation,” she said.

She also said this will be the first time for a private higher institutio­n to possess such a huge talent pool of advanced academics, which will definitely improve the level of higher education in Zhejiang.

The establishm­ent of Westlake University was initiated by a team of seven top Chinese academics, including Shi, in March 2015. The approval of establishi­ng Westlake marks a new stage: constructi­on and developmen­t.

“This is a leap in the developmen­t of the university, as well as a singular moment in China’s higher education reform and developmen­t,” the university said in a release.

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