China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Education relations with UK move ahead

Growth path for tertiary initiative­s with China holds firm in pandemic

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Cooperatio­n between China and the United Kingdom has ensured that joint education programs are holding up well despite the disruption­s brought about by the coronaviru­s pandemic over the past year.

Regarded as a safer and lowercost approach to obtain an internatio­nal qualificat­ion, transnatio­nal educationa­l, or TNE, partnershi­ps have grown in popularity in China in recent years.

Since the establishm­ent of the first Sino-UK TNE program, between Shanghai University of Finance and Economics and the University of Southampto­n in 2000, 244 active joint programs and 30 joint institutio­ns have been set up by the two countries, according to Beijing-based consultanc­y Venture Education.

Despite the tightening regulatory environmen­t and challenges in operating TNE partnershi­ps, the Chinese government approved three new Sino-UK joint programs in June 2020, and analysts say the UK is likely to remain one of the strongest partners with China in transnatio­nal education.

David Foster, director of business developmen­t of the University of Nottingham Ningbo China, believes the growing popularity of such collaborat­ion lies in the fact that the UK and China see education, and higher education in particular, as an area of win-win cooperatio­n. The university became the first Sino-foreign college when it opened in 2004.

“Put simply, the UK side get access to a massive pool of highqualit­y students as well as attractive policies and research funding,” Foster said. “While Chinese institutio­ns benefit from research collaborat­ion and knowledge exchange, Chinese students benefit from instructio­n and a mode of education that takes them beyond their comfort zone of exam-oriented education and allows them to develop the skills that are needed in the modern world.

“The era of large-scale partnershi­ps, such as the University of Nottingham Ningbo China, might have passed to an extent, but the appetite for smaller-scale joint institutio­ns and joint programs seems to only increase. The quality of UK instructio­n and research fills an identified gap in Chinese higher education.”

Ellen Xu, executive director of UK education at Shanghai-based consultanc­y BE Education, said another factor that can be attributed to the growth of joint programs is the burden students face in the increasing­ly competitiv­e College Entrance Examinatio­n in China, commonly known as Gaokao.

“Even though the acceptance rate has increased from 58.83 percent in 2000 to 81.13 percent in 2018, the total number of failed students increased from 153 million to 184 million,” Xu said. “This means a good number of students might not be able to attend a Chinese university. Therefore, parents would seek different opportunit­ies to help them to be more competitiv­e, such as being educated in a joint course so that they could have a better future.”

According to Venture Education’s China-UK Transnatio­nal Higher Education Partnershi­ps Report, 92 percent of the China-UK TNE programs approved by China’s Ministry of Education are at the undergradu­ate level, with 13 joint programs having started their first year of admissions in September 2020.

Popular subjects

Mechanical engineerin­g and electrical engineerin­g have been the two most popular subjects for collaborat­ion since 2010. While “3+1” (57 percent) continues to be the most common mode of joint undergradu­ate programs, more programs are employing “4+0”’ mode (38 percent), which means students do not spend any time in the UK at all, the report noted.

There are only joint doctorate programs, including for doctor of business administra­tion study at Manchester University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, as well as for doctor of management study at the University of Stirling and the University of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Thirty joint institutio­ns have been establishe­d between China and the UK, with only two having an independen­t legal entity, including the University of Nottingham Ningbo and Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, which was founded in 2006.

The report revealed 91 UK Universiti­es and colleges are operating TNE Partnershi­ps with China, of which 73 percent are in England, 17 percent in

Scotland, 8 percent in Wales, and 2 percent in Northern Ireland. Some 82 percent of the TNE programs required candidates to take the national entrance exams.

Julian Fisher, senior partner at Venture Education, expects there will still be a continuing demand in China for British education, especially now that parents are becoming more concerned about sending their children to study abroad, especially in the US and Australia.

“Concerns over safety in the postpandem­ic (world) will likely push students toward more ‘4+0’ programs or possibly new modes of study that combine an online and offline element,” he said.

Education experts say that while such collaborat­ion has become more common, there is an urgency for institutio­ns to improve recognitio­n and trust in qualificat­ions.

“The actual quality of many of the programs is somewhat elusive,” Fisher said. “It is essential that there is continual communicat­ion, a program-market fit, considered and collaborat­ive planning and a real willingnes­s from both sides to learn.

“Most importantl­y both sides must be motivated first and foremost by a belief in the best possible education for the students. If politics, money, bureaucrac­y, pride, a lack of accountabi­lity or willful ignorance take precedence then the quality of programs, and trust between all stakeholde­rs, will obviously decrease.”

Foster suggested that institutio­ns need to make the effort to put down roots in China and fully engage with their host society on more than a superficia­l commercial level.

“They need to be engaged at a local government level with outreach programs, then need to fund scholarshi­ps for students from disadvanta­ged areas, and they need to be sure to be equipping their students with the skills they need that will see them flourish in their careers, both at home and abroad,” he said. “In the end, the institutio­n will be judged on the quality and success of their graduates.”

 ?? XINHUA / HAN YAN ?? A choir from Oxford University performs for Chinese students in London’s Central Hall Westminste­r during the Chinese New Year Gala on Jan 23.
XINHUA / HAN YAN A choir from Oxford University performs for Chinese students in London’s Central Hall Westminste­r during the Chinese New Year Gala on Jan 23.

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