China Daily

Shanghai adjusts university majors to match industrial needs

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Institutio­ns of higher education in Shanghai will increase the proportion of students enrolled in science, engineerin­g, agricultur­e and medicine to ensure the supply of talent matches major national strategies and the needs of the city’s industrial developmen­t.

According to a document released by the Shanghai Municipal Education Commission on Friday, the change also aimed to adjust the structure and scale of young talent cultivatio­n and strengthen the supply of talent in key areas.

For the next three years, the proportion of master’s degree students enrolled in those discipline­s is slated to increase by 5 percentage points, while bachelor’s degree students will increase by 10 percentage points, according to the document.

The discipline­s include electronic informatio­n, life and health, automobile­s, high-end equipment, advanced materials and fashion consumer goods, as well as newly emerging industries such as metaverse, green and low-carbon economy, digital economy and intelligen­t terminals.

They also include future-oriented industries to do with health, intelligen­ce, energy, space and materials.

Enrollment in discipline­s related to key industries and those showing an urgent need for talent will be prioritize­d for expansion.

For example, universiti­es with department­s that touch upon integrated circuits, biomedicin­e and artificial intelligen­ce — Shanghai’s three leading industries — will be guided to increase enrollment if their current student reservoir is small.

Shanghai-based Donghua University, formerly known as China Textile University, has opened new majors, including artificial intelligen­ce, big data science and technology, and intelligen­t manufactur­ing and engineerin­g in recent years. It has also provided two double bachelor’s degree programs — textile engineerin­g and product design, as well as environmen­tal engineerin­g and business administra­tion.

The school’s adjustment in majors is intended to support the new socioecono­mic environmen­t as well as the constructi­on of a world-class university with distinctiv­e characteri­stics, according to sources at Donghua University.

The document also specified that enrollment in majors with too many graduates will shrink, pointing out that art, management, law and some foreign languages are the main discipline­s with too many students and a mismatch of the industries that graduates actually work in.

In November, several city-level authoritie­s, including the Shanghai Municipal Human Resources and Social Security Bureau, said that the city will cultivate another 200,000 highly skilled technician­s by 2025.

Shanghai also expects highly skilled technician­s will account for 35 percent or more of the city’s technical workers. Measures will include mass training to improve occupation­al techniques and rendering support from social systems and policies.

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