China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tsinghua admissions standards debated

- By SU ZHOU suzhou@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s prestigiou­s Tsinghua University hasbeenbom­barded with criticism after it released a new set of admissions requiremen­ts for foreign applicants.

According to the university’s 2017 requiremen­ts for internatio­nal bachelor’s degree applicants, foreign citizens under 25 years of age may apply if they have a high-school diploma and are proficient in the Chinese language — meaning the new Band 5 level of the HSK language test, which is administer­ed worldwide.

Previously, an entrance examinatio­n was required for internatio­nal undergradu­ate admission.

An admissions official said that the threshold has not been lowered for internatio­nal students, People’s Daily reported.

“After foreign applicants submit their documents, Tsinghua will organize group of experts to evaluate them, without knowing their names. Enrollment will be finalized after a strict process that includes interviews,” the official said.

“In recent years, increasing numbers of internatio­nal students want to study at Tsinghua. With the new policy, we have actually expanded the scope of applicatio­ns, thus making the process more competitiv­e than before.”

The number of newinterna­tional students enrolled for bachelor’s degrees will be the same as last year, the official said.

Criticism online denounced the policy as preferenti­al for foreign students and one that would dampen Chinese students’ enthusiasm, because Tsinghua is known as one the more difficult Chinese universiti­es to get into.

However, the official quoted by People’s Daily said Chinese proficienc­y is one of a range of criteria for overseas applicants.

“Besides, most internatio­nal students will take classes with Chinese students. Thus, we ask all foreign applicants to submit their HSK scores as the most basic requiremen­t for applicatio­ns. Internatio­nal admissions will not affect the enrollment of Chinese students,” the official said.

Xiong Bingqi, vice-president of 21st Century Education Research Institute, said the percentage of internatio­nal students is an important measure ofaunivers­ity’sglobalinf­luence, and Tsinghua cannot select foreign students in the sameway it selectsChi­nese students.

“Currently, foreigners account for only 5.8 percent of Tsinghua students, which is lower than the 20 percent figure at universiti­es such as Oxford and Harvard,” Xiong said.

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