China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Fruitful holiday

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Young Chinese students going abroad on study tours

More Chinese students are putting overseas study tours on their agenda this summer. Consisting of language courses, sightseein­g and internatio­nal communicat­ion, study tours meet the demands of Chinese parents and students for a long and fruitful holiday, despite costs of around $4,000 to $6,000.

This year saw the number of students going abroad for study tours increase by nearly 40 percent, with reservatio­ns for tours starting almost a year ago, according to English First, a SwedishEng­lish education company in China.

A recent report published by a Chinese tourism website showed most study tour participan­ts were from middle schools. According to the report released by tuniu.com in June, 73 percent of their participan­ts in 2016 were middle school students, 11 percent primary school students and only 3 percent college students.

Students of a younger age seem to be the upward trend.

“The biggest growth of our clients in the past few years is among primary school students, over 50 percent,” says Joe Chiu, country manager of China’s EF Internatio­nal Language Center.

Unlike study tour participan­ts in other countries who are at least 13 or 14 years old, Chinese parents seem to be more willing to let their children go on tours at a very young age, Chiu says, noting that the youngest Chinese participan­t in his program was only 5 years old.

According to a blue book on global study tours released by New Oriental Education & Technology Group, expanding children’s horizons was the major goal for parents, while improving language skills, experienci­ng independen­ce and exploring cultural diversity were also popular.

Zhan Fuman, a 14-year-old from Guangzhou, Guangdong province, currently on a 15-day study tour in Australia with a price tag of 32,800 yuan ($4,820), went to the United States for her first overseas study tour last winter.

“She has been much more confident and independen­t since her first tour in the United States and learned to use knowledge from books and real life communicat­ions,” says Zhu Wanxia, Zhan’s mother.

Going on a study tour does not lead to going to a foreign university in the future, Zhu says, adding that they prefer their child go to a top Chinese university instead.

According to Chiu, only half of the students in their study tour programs went abroad for higher education.

“Some parents consider staying in China as a better choice for their children, and such overseas study tours are more about qualities beyond learning by the books,” says Chen Jingjing, Chiu’s co-worker from English First.

According to China’s Ministry of Education, over 80 percent of Chinese students who studied abroad returned to China in 2016.

Being the world’s secondlarg­est economy, China is hungry for talent in all aspects.

According to the Outline of China’s National Plan for Medium and Long-Term Education Reform and Developmen­t (2010-20) issued by the Education Ministry in July 2010, China called for more internatio­nal communicat­ion and cooperatio­n to give the country’s youth internatio­nal horizons, making them better understand internatio­nal rules.

The ministry also encourages primary and middle schools to put short study tours in student curricula.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JIA ZHUTAO AND NAN SHAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Top: Chinese and internatio­nal students visit Stanford University this month. Above: Travel companies find study tours are a winner.
PHOTOS BY JIA ZHUTAO AND NAN SHAN / FOR CHINA DAILY Top: Chinese and internatio­nal students visit Stanford University this month. Above: Travel companies find study tours are a winner.
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