China Daily

University leaders seek more Sino-UK exchanges

- By CECILY LIU in London cecily.liu@ mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Chinese and British universiti­es both can benefit from further collaborat­ion in research, student exchanges, and regular expertise-sharing dialogues, university heads said at a conference in Oxford on Saturday.

“The complement­ary characteri­stics of British and Chinese universiti­es make us ideal partners for collaborat­ion, to cultivate the next generation of globally minded talents,” said Zhou Zuoyu, vice-president of Beijing Normal University.

“British universiti­es, which are some of the oldest in the world, enjoy the benefit of tradition, reputation, and excellence. On the other hand, Chinese universiti­es are fastdevelo­ping and our research activities tend to respond faster to industry demand. Both sets of characteri­stics are important in determinin­g universiti­es’ impact in society.”

The second UK-China University Presidents’ Roundtable, initiated and hosted by Oxford’s Regent’s Park College, drew delegates from such universiti­es as Oxford, York, Edinburgh, Nanjing, Xiamen, and Beijing Normal. Topics discussed included universiti­es’ social responsibi­lity, their internatio­nal developmen­t trends and research collaborat­ion.

In recent years, education links have grown significan­tly. Bilateral academic research has soared since 2014, when the two countries committed more than 200 million pounds ($267 million) to supporting research partnershi­ps.

Mark Goodwin, deputy vicechance­llor of the University of Exeter, said internatio­nal collaborat­ion can be a significan­t factor in addressing many pressing global issues.

In recent years, Chinese universiti­es have become increasing­ly competitiv­e in the quality of their teaching and research, a trend reflected in their rise in internatio­nal rankings.

The latest Times Higher Education university ranking table places Tsinghua University and Peking University as 14th and 17th, respective­ly. Two years ago, Tsinghua was 18th — the first time a Chinese university reached the top 20.

“Chinese universiti­es’ teaching quality is improving very quickly, the quality of research is becoming noticeably stronger,” Goodwin said. “The quality of students we are receiving is also getting stronger.”

Chinese students are by far the largest population of internatio­nal students in the United Kingdom, comprising almost one-third of non-EU students in the 2016-17 academic year.

Meanwhile, more than 397,000 internatio­nal students studied in China in 2015, twice as many as 10 years earlier.

Goodwin said he would like to see more British students studying in China.

“We would like to encourage them to be more entreprene­urial and more globally minded,” he said. “China will be a strong power and a strong economy in the future, it is important that UK students understand that.”

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