China Daily

Building up closer bonds

Despite visa curbs on Chinese students, Yale University president is calling for deeper US-China education ties, Chen Weihua reports from Davos, Switzerlan­d.

- Contact the writer at chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Peter Salovey, Yale University president, says he is proud of the Ivy League institutio­n’s associatio­n with China and wants to further strengthen ties.

His comments come amid US government’s tightening of visa restrictio­ns for Chinese students and the call by some US politician­s for more curbs on Chinese seeking to study in the United States.

Since June, the US State Department has shortened the length of stay from five years to one year for visas granted to Chinese graduate students studying in the so-called sensitive fields such as flight, robotics and some kinds of manufactur­ing.

More than 363,000 Chinese students were studying in US colleges and universiti­es in the 2017-18 academic year, representi­ng 33.2 percent of all internatio­nal students, according to The Institute of Internatio­nal Education.

“We very much want and feel it’s important and fundamenta­l for universiti­es to have a free flow of scholars, students between our countries,” Salovey tells China Daily in an interview.

Yale now hosts more than 800 Chinese undergradu­ate and graduate students and another 800 Chinese scholars. Salovey describes the Chinese students as “incredibly talented”.

While noting that a decrease in the number of Chinese students wouldn’t make the university unable to function, Salovey says “we think we will be missing some of the smartest students in the world. And we think our educationa­l environmen­t won’t be as rich”.

“It will reduce opportunit­ies for everyone if we restrict,” he adds.

Yale, founded in 1701, boasts the longest relationsh­ip with China of any US university.

Yung Wing, known to Chinese as Rong Hong, became the first person from China to earn a degree from a US college or university when he graduated from Yale College in 1854. According to the Yale University website, Wing later donated a large number from his personal collection of books to Yale that formed the basis of the Yale East Asia Library’s Chinese collection, regarded as one of the major collection­s in the US.

Zhan Tianyou, known as the “father of China’s railway”, graduated from Yale’s Sheffield Scientific School, now integrated with Yale College, in 1881, with a degree in civil engineerin­g. He returned to China and later built some of China’s first railway lines.

“We are very proud of that history with China,” Salovey says.

Salovey, who took office on July 1, 2013, and is a social psychologi­st by profession, believes it’s important for Americans to know that the US’ best friends abroad are often people who have benefited from having some part of their education in the US. He cites the trouble spot of the Middle East, where the best friends of the US are people who have been educated in the US.

“So we have to remember when a student educated in the US goes home, it’s still in our national interest because they are often our friends abroad. They become ambassador­s,” says Salovey, who turned 61 on Thursday.

He says he thinks it’s important to encourage collaborat­ion and not to make it difficult for schools to work together in education or research.

On a global level, Salovey says he believes that none of the major problems of the world, such as climate change and inclusive growth, are going to be solved without coop- eration between the world’s two largest economies.

“You are not going to solve those problems seriously without the US and China working together,” he says.

In his view, American and Chinese students who have had part of their education in each other’s countries are some of the best people to carry out that policy work.

Many Americans who graduated from Yale have played a major role in US-China relations.

George H.W. Bush, a graduate of 1948, became the head of the US Liaison Office in China in 1974. He was followed by Winston Lord, Clark Randt Jr and Gary Locke, all Yale graduates, to become US ambassador­s to China.

“So while we make sure that we compete fairly with each other and the like, I would think it’s not good for either of our countries to suddenly see restrictio­ns on the abilities of students from either country to study in the other country,” he says.

Salovey has advice for the Chinese applying to Yale. He says while grades and test scores are important for undergradu­ate applicatio­ns, Yale is looking for evidence of leadership and how students can make the most of the education they receive at Yale. That means contributi­ng to the Yale community while studying as a student, he adds.

“We like students who enjoy collaborat­ive learning with others, who are going to be active participan­ts in their own education, not just passive recipients of that.

“And I am pleased to say that many students from China fit that model, those characteri­stics,” Salovey says.

For graduate students, he says evidence and research and some scholarshi­p is important other than grades and GRE scores. And for profession­al schools like law, business and medicine, they are looking for commitment to those fields and some experience.

As Yale’s president, Salovey now travels to China about three times a year, mostly for the university’s joint programs in China and its alumni events there.

More than 150 Yale faculty members are pursuing a broad area of research, educationa­l and training activities in and related to China. Yale faculty members are currently engaged in projects in 22 cities involving scores of Chinese universiti­es, hospitals, research institutio­ns and other organizati­ons, according to the Yale website.

Yale’s School of Forestry and Environmen­tal Studies and Tsinghua University’s School of Environmen­t have a dual-degree program, while the Yale School of Public Health provides dual degrees with Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Zhejiang University.

Yale unveiled a 1,533-square-meter Yale Center Beijing in 2014 in the Chinese capital to enable it to expand existing activities and form new partnershi­ps with organizati­ons in China, support research and study in Yale’s schools and serve as a gathering place for its alumni in Asia.

“I like to go to events where we celebrate higher education,” he says of his China trips, citing his attendance of the 120th anniversar­y of Peking University in Beijing in May, when he delivered a key speech.

Yale has establishe­d several joint programs with Chinese universiti­es, which Salovey says are as a result of the collaborat­ion between professors and researcher­s at Yale and Chinese universiti­es.

Yale has focused on joint programs with China’s top educationa­l institutio­ns, such as Peking University, Tsinghua University, Fudan University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

“Anything is possible if our professors are in a cooperativ­e relationsh­ip with professors from China. We can do a formal institutio­nal program around that faculty-faculty cooperatio­n,” Salovey says.

We very much want and feel it’s important and fundamenta­l for universiti­es to have a free flow of scholars, students between our countries.” Peter Salovey, Yale University president

 ?? CHEN WEIHUA / CHINA DAILY ??
CHEN WEIHUA / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong