Belt and Road projects lead to massive growth in higher education for overseas students in China
By Liu
Xin and Li Lei
As Belt
and Road construction continues to bring tangible benefits to the countries
involved, China's higher education is also playing an increasingly important
role in facilitating the development of these countries through training more
and more overseas talents.
Higher
education in China for overseas students has seen remarkable growth in terms of
quality and scale, as more students come to China to learn advanced technology
beside language and culture.
University alliance
As the
starting point of the ancient Silk Road, Xi'an, capital of Northwest China's
Shaanxi Province, is playing a pivotal role in linking countries along the Belt
and Road in terms of higher education.
In 2015,
Xi'an Jiaotong University, a top university in Shaanxi Province, launched a
university alliance along the Silk Road to train international talents and work
as a platform for education cooperation. So far, the alliance has incorporated
151 universities from 38 countries, according to the School of Foreign Students
of Xi'an Jiaotong University.
Under
the framework of the alliance, the university aims to train talentsin
accordance with the practical requirement of Belt and Road construction. In
2018, Xi'an Jiaotong University had a total of 2,804 overseas students from 136
countries and regions, and 70 percent of them are from countries along the Belt
and Road.
Chalwe
Lengwe chose Jiaotong to study medicine in 2013 when he was 19 years old, and
now he is in medical practice at the First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an
Jiaotong University.
"In
Zambia, many students would like to learn medicine, but there are few medical
schools and they are very costly, especially the private ones," Lengwe
told the Global Times.
He said
the public medicine school in Zambia charges 48,000 yuan ($7,164) per year, and
tuition in private schools costs 70,000 yuan.
"Some
students in Zambia with excellent marks still cannot get accepted into medical
schools because they are so scarce. China becomes the best option with its low
cost and high-quality education," said Lengwe.
Lengwe
got a Chinese governmental scholarship that covers all his tuition fees and
provides 2,500 yuan monthly in allowance.
Lengwe
said he is planning to get his doctor's license in Zambia after graduation.
"The main reason I am studying medicine is to help others, which makes me
feel life is meaningful," Lengwe told the Global Times.
Sohail
Khan is planning to do his doctoral studies in China this year after studying
clinical medicine in Xi'an Jiaotong University for almost 10 years.
"I
like China's safe environment and convenient facilities," Khan said.
Khan did
his undergraduate studies at the university from 2010 to 2014. After a year of
medical practice back in Pakistan, Khan applied for Xi'an Jiaotong University
for postgraduate studies without hesitation, and got a full scholarship from
the China Scholarship Council in 2016.
Sofia
Zachepylo, a freshman at the university, and a kung fu lover, got a Silk-Road
Scholarship from the Chinese government in 2018.
"All
the stories between me and China originated from Jackie Chan, as I started to
learn the Chinese language and martial arts when I was 6 years old,"
Zachepylo told the Global Times.
The
outgoing 19-year-old Ukrainian girl is quite the star at the School of
Economics and Finance of Xi'an Jiaotong University with fluent spoken Chinese.
"China
is undergoing rapid development, and I assume it will soon become the most
powerful country economically. Therefore, I'd like to learn economics and trade
in China," said Zachepylo.
At the
same time, the university has been actively seeking cooperation with leading
universities in countries in Europe and the US and expanding student enrollment
in these countries. A joint-degree program of the university's electrical
engineering school with Politecnico di Milano was established to cultivate
postgraduates.
Training talent
Chang'an
University, one of China's top institutes for road and bridge and automobile
engineering, has seen a sharp growth in the number of overseas students.
From
2013 to 2018, the number of overseas students in the university increased from
409 to 1,600. The university attributes the growth of overseas student numbers
to the university-industry cooperation model.
"University-industry
cooperation to train overseas students is a feature of Chang'an University, since
we are among the first batch of universities in China that have adopted the
pattern, as well as the most experienced one," Lü Weidong, director of the
executive office of the International Education School of Chang'an University,
told the Global Times.
According
to Lü, most of the overseas students are from Southeast Asian countries and
Africa. "Many large construction engineering companies that are
participating in the Belt and Road construction came to us for cooperation, as
training local talent is an effective way to curb costs and guarantee
maintenance work after construction," said Lü, adding that
"cultivating local talent is also a responsibility that Chinese
enterprises are fulfilling in the countries involved in the Belt and Road."
"Cooperation
with Shaanxi Automobile Holdings focused on scientific research projects of
domestic students. Now the company has set up scholarships in our university to
jointly train overseas students, as the company expands its business scope to
some Southeast Asian and African countries such as Cambodia, Algeria and
Laos," Lü told the Global Times.
Lü said
that in the beginning of 2018, the university and Shaanxi Automobile selected
20 students from these countries for postgraduate studies in the university,
and provided them scholarships covering all their tuition fees. Additionally,
the company also set up other scholarships for students with outstanding
performances.
In
addition to road and bridge engineering and automobile engineering, the
university also established majors serving projects involving sectors such as
engineering accounting and management.
In 2018,
a total of 1,000 overseas students were admitted to the university, and the
goal in 2019 is 1,600.
A Belt
and Road engineering training center was also established in the Chang'an
University to provide one or two-year technical training and further education
for overseas engineers.
Lü told
the Global Times that most of the overseas students who graduated from Chang'an
University have returned to their home countries and are working for various
infrastructure projects. Some of them have been employed by Chinese
construction companies to work in overseas construction projects in different
parts of the world.
Source:
Global Times
A Nepal student is studying
traditional Chinese medicine in a Chinese hospital. (Photo by Xia Wenhui from
People’s Daily Online)
Belt and Road projects lead to massive growth in higher education for overseas students in China
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