Global Times

Failing grade

China shuts down over 200 education programs run jointly with foreign colleges

- By Cao Siqi

For Chinese students, participat­ing in the national college entrance examinatio­ns or applying for overseas study are no longer the only ways to get a diploma and achieve their career goals. Attending Sino-foreign universiti­es and receiving an overseas education at home has become increasing­ly popular in recent years.

However, a recent notice released by the Ministry of Education (MOE) is striking fear into many students and parents. The notice announced the terminatio­n of 234 partnershi­ps between Chinese and overseas institutio­ns and programs, including five jointly managed institutio­ns. This represents about 1 in 5 of the total number of such partnershi­ps.

The ministry said the partnershi­p model plays a significan­t role in promoting education reform and cultivatin­g creative talent, but along with the rapid developmen­t of the joint programs, some institutio­ns were poorly funded or had poor teaching quality. The ministry decided to shut them down due to a sense of dissatisfa­ction from students.

The notice comes amid the college applicatio­n season. Some students and parents wonder if they should avoid all joint programs for fear that the degree may not be recognized by the MOE in the future. They wonder whether their degrees obtained from joint programs will be valuable for their future career.

End of the road

“To be honest, I know my school will eventually die one day,” Tao Yang (pseudonym), a graduate student from Oumei College of Hebei Normal University of Science and Technology, told 21jingji.com.

The college was establishe­d jointly with Canada’s Medicine Hat College in 2002 and stopped recruiting students years ago. The recruitmen­t brochure said the college imported courses and textbooks from Medicine Hat College and is taught bilinguall­y. After two years of study at home, the students can go to Canada to finish the remaining two years. They can acquire diplomas from the two schools after graduation.

Tao told 21jingji.com that there was no bilingual education in her major and she did not apply for the study in Canada. “Like most of the students, I chose the school because it could grant me with an undergradu­ate diploma,” she said.

Another one of the five closed jointly-managed institutio­ns is the Zhuoyue Internatio­nal College, which was establishe­d by the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics (UIBE) in Beijing and Fort Hays State University in the US.

On the college’s official website, it says the college, located in Langfang, Hebei Province, is a branch of UIBE, aiming to cultivate creative and versatile internatio­nal talent.

An article published on the UIBE website said that Zhuoyue Internatio­nal College is one of the school’s partnershi­p programs. The school said it cooperates with reputable overseas universiti­es and refuted media reports suggesting that the college was a result of cooperatio­n with overseas fly-bynight schools.

“The Sino-foreign partnershi­p institutio­ns and programs have long been questioned by students and parents, as they charge high tuition fees and claim to provide internatio­nal education, but turn out to be no different from ordinary programs. The programs eventually serve as a channel to get a diploma,” Xiong Bingqi, deputy director of the 21st Century Education Research Institute, told the Global Times. “Some of those programs only offer students an overseas diploma. Therefore, both schools treat the program as a profitable business and implement loose recruitmen­t requiremen­ts. Some Chinese schools even cooperate with unaccredit­ed overseas institutio­ns,” said Xiong.

In China, it is widely known that attending Sino-foreign university schools, which require lower national college entrance examinatio­n scores, could be a decent way for some students to get a recognized degree and a chance to study overseas.

Especially for those who earned good scores but still could not reach the threshold of China’s top universiti­es like Tsinghua and Peking, a Sino-foreign university serves as a perfect channel for them to enter an elite school and get an overseas school diploma.

Quality partners

Insiders pointed out that the sweeping shutdown only targets those schools which have already stopped recruiting students or have no capability to attract new students. It will not affect esteemed partnershi­p programs, which are still competitiv­e for students who obtained fairly good college exam scores.

Liu Jingnan, chancellor of Kunshan Duke University, told the Global Times previously that Sino-foreign universiti­es look at a variety of factors beyond entrance examinatio­n scores in student enrollment, unlike most Chinese schools.

To be admitted to Kunshan Duke, college entrance exam scores account for 50 percent, while overall performanc­e during senior school years counts for 40 percent, said Liu. He added that over 30 percent of professors at the school were sent by Duke

University.

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Students and parents gather at an informatio­n session about Sinoforeig­n university partnershi­p programs, which was held in Shanghai in June.
Photo: VCG Students and parents gather at an informatio­n session about Sinoforeig­n university partnershi­p programs, which was held in Shanghai in June.

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