China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New charter school provides a boost for Guangzhou’s tech hub

- By ZHENG CAIXIONG in Guangzhou zhengcaixi­ong@chinadaily.com.cn

The Huangpu district government in the Guangdong provincial capital is expecting the Guangzhou branch of Granada Hills Charter School to play an important role in helping to promote its educationa­l internatio­nalization in the years ahead.

The district government signed a memorandum of understand­ing with the Granada Hills Charter School of the United States and the Markham Internatio­nal Education Group in October to jointly construct the Guangzhou branch of Granada Hills Charter School in the district, which has become a new high-tech and scientific innovation center in the southern metropolis.

According to the memorandum, it’s estimated that the Guangzhou school will be able to cater to around 4,800 students from China and overseas every year.

Bilingual education will be introduced at the new school.

The Guangzhou branch, which will cover education from kindergart­en, primary, junior and senior middle school, is planning to recruit about 400 teachers and related teaching staff members from abroad.

In addition to Sino-US senior middle school courses, the school will set up some college curriculum­s of the US, including AP (Advanced Placement), IB TOEFL and SAT, for senior middle school students, to help its students directly apply to colleges and universiti­es in the US and other countries when they graduate.

Students at the school will be able to take part in exchanges with affiliated US schools for a month, a school term, a year, or even longer periods of time.

Professors and teachers from the US will regularly be invited to the school to give lectures, conduct academic exchanges and help build the school into a major training base for teachers in the mainland.

The school is expected to cater for both day students and boarders.

Zhou Yawei, member of the Standing Committee of Guangzhou Committee of CPC and Party secretary of Huangpu district, said constructi­on of the school would help further raise the educationa­l levels in the district and also help Huangpu promote educationa­l internatio­nalization.

“The school is expected to help Huangpu district in the eastern part of Guangzhou attract more talented people from both home and abroad over the coming years,” he said.

Huangpu district is sparing no effort in attracting talent to support its economic developmen­t, and the district government is planning to give top priority to the developmen­t of the IT, artificial intelligen­ce and biomedicin­e industries.

Zhou met Brian Bauer, principal of Granada Hills Charter High School, in October to discuss the expansion of educationa­l cooperatio­n between the district and the school.

Zhou and Bauer pledged to develop the Guangzhou project into a major senior middle school that could compete with some of the world’s most renowned schools.

Bauer said he believed the new school would have great potential in the years ahead, as the market for internatio­nal education was burgeoning in the region.

“The Guangzhou school will attach importance to cultivatin­g students’ creative and innovation abilities, and connect with prestigiou­s universiti­es and colleges in the US, forming a coherent and integrated internatio­nal educationa­l process,” he said.

In recent years Huangpu district has attracted a large number of foreign companies and profession­als to the area and is an ideal environmen­t for an internatio­nal school, he added.

Granada Hills Charter High School, a public school, is the largest charter school in the United States.

Earlier this year, Huangpu district signed contracts to construct the Huangpu Shrewsbury Experiment­al School and Internatio­nal Hwa Chong School of Singapore.

Covering an area of 5.52 hectares, Britain’s Shrewsbury Experiment­al School is planned for 1,500 students a year while the Internatio­nal Hwa Chong School, with an area of 6.5 hectares, will take in up to 2,900 students, including 600 senior middle school students and 2,300 junior middle school students.

Both schools will begin to enroll students from the autumn of 2019.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? US kids sell goods in Kansas to help raise money for orphans in Central China’s Henan province.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY US kids sell goods in Kansas to help raise money for orphans in Central China’s Henan province.

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