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| August 2006 | Volume
19, Issue 4 |
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REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE PRACTICAL INFORMATION FROM THE ARCHIVES
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Regional
News
Asia/Pacific Australia Australian and Chinese Institution Open Joint Facility Down Under Griffith Pro Vice Chancellor Ian O’Connor hopes that the new arrangement will help boost study abroad at his institution where currently only one in 20 undergraduates travel overseas for a portion of their studies. Peking University and Griffith first developed a relationship after Griffith helped the Chinese university implement a master of public health at the Chinese Center for Disease Control following the 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). The Courier Mail More Foreign Universities Set Their Sights on South Australia as State Positions to Develop as Regional Education Hub
According to reports in the Times Higher Education Supplement and The Australian Higher Education Supplement, at least two British universities and one U.S. institution have begun negotiations with the South Australian government to set up within the next four years. Bristol University and Cranfield University are believed to be the two British universities to have begun negotiating on the possibility of offering graduate-level programs. Cranfield specializes in defense subjects and is co-located with Britain’s Defense College of Management and Technology. The defense industry is one of the niche professional skills markets the South Australian government is hoping to build in a broader plan to turn the state, and Adelaide in particular, into a regional education hub. Specifically, the government is trying to attract high-caliber programs in areas such as energy economics, high-technology criminology and software engineering. International student numbers in the state are already growing at three times the national average, and a majority of the 70 students that enrolled in Carnegie Mellon’s two master of science programs are from overseas. The Pittsburgh-based private school is offering degrees in public policy and management, and information technology. In other parts of the country, Heriot-Watt University, a Scottish institution, has signed an agreement with Sydney-based financial services education group Tribeca Learning to offer its online MBA degrees through its Edinburgh Business School. The university has already applied for licensure as a foreign university in Australia. Watford College, A British specialist school, is currently in talks with marketing group Education Adelaide to open a branch campus to offer English language and foundation studies courses later this year. The Australian New Class of University Approved
The Australian China China Pursues Exchange Cooperation with Asian Neighbors
One neighbor in particular with whom China seeks to improve education exchange is Japan. Despite strained diplomatic relations, the two countries are forging ahead with plans to expand exchange opportunities between their respective academic communities. At the Fourth China-Japan University Presidents’ Forum in late May, officials from 15 institutions signed or renewed cooperation agreements. The Japanese government has also decided to increase the level of funding Chinese students at expensive private universities in their country receive. Of the 120,000 foreign students studying in Japan, more than 80,000 are Chinese. China View Students Riot Over Discrepancy on University Diplomas
Rioting students speaking out against the university’s decision said they felt cheated because they had chosen to study at Shengda after being promised they would receive a credential from Zhengzhou. Many students attending Shengda scored poorly on national college entrance exams, come from poor rural backgrounds, and have borrowed large sums of money to pay the college’s relatively high tuition in hopes that it might help them better compete in China’s tight job market. Since the beginning of China’s economic boom, the country has seen an exponential increase in the higher education options that have been made available to students, a trend that has fueled concern among government officials that education might soon outpace the economy in terms of growth. Recently, the Chinese government has scaled back the expansion of the state higher education system in order to stem the possibility of unrest among large numbers of unemployed university graduates (see June issue of WENR). In the last seven years, the number of students graduating from China’s institutions of higher education has grown fivefold to around 4 million. According to the National Development and Reform Commission, 60 percent of those graduates are having difficulties finding employment. AP Mainland Students Applying to Hong Kong Universities in Record Numbers
The rapidly increasing popularity of Hong Kong’s universities among mainland students has prompted Chinese higher education officials to call for urgent reform to tertiary studies in China in order to keep top students in the country, reports the People’s Daily. A recent on-line survey conducted by a Chinese Internet news source found that 67 percent of respondents would rather study at one of Hong Kong’s universities than at the mainland’s prestigious Beijing and Qinghua universities. According to Lap-Chee Tsui, Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong, two thirds of mainland students who graduate from the university decide to stay in Hong Kong to find work rather than return to the mainland. Tsui also said that this year his university received 10,000 applications from mainland students attempting to gain admission in one of only 300 places. People’s Daily University Presidents Voice Rare Criticism
In July, a number of high-profile speakers taking part in the Chinese-Foreign University Presidents’ Forum in Shanghai criticized an overemphasis in graduate education on meeting publishing quotas, and a lack of focus on engaging in worthwhile and meaningful research. Chinese graduate students must publish a set amount of articles in top journals each year, sometimes upward of 20. University presidents speaking at the forum said this has led to research papers with entirely fictitious results or gross cases of plagiarism. Much of the problem has been blamed on the way universities are assessed by local authorities, which base much of their funding decisions on research output. The outburst follows a string of high-profile dismals of top Chinese researchers amid charges of corruption and plagiarism. Presidents also chose to level criticism against the college entrance examination, suggesting that an overemphasis on testing has suffocated innovation and left many talented students by the wayside. Rather than relying on the results of a single make-or-break test, university leaders at the forum suggested that other indicators such as high school term scores should also be evaluated. People's Daily Online IndiaIndian University Enters Chinese and African Markets
Chennai Online News Wigan and Leigh College to Increase Presence in India
Business Standard Demand for Executive Business Education Being Met by Overseas Providers
In June, the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIM-A) signed a memorandum of understanding with US-based Duke Corporate Education to provide customized corporate education programs in India and the Middle East. Programs will reportedly be tailored to individual corporate needs and will generally be no longer than a few months in duration. In August the Auckland University of Technology (AUT) will begin offering an 18-month fulltime flexible MBA program for working business executives in association with the Institute of Finance and International Management, a business school based in Bangalore and operated by the not-for-profit Centre for Developmental Education. AUT news release JapanEnrollment at Private Universities Dismal
The private university sector has been deregulated in recent years and as a result many new universities have opened around the country. According to the Promotion and Mutual Aid Corporation, eight new universities and 41 departments were created this spring, excluding those opened by joint-stock companies and those offering correspondence only courses. With falling birth rates and enrollments many private institutions face dire financial straights. According to officials from the private university lobby group, declining birthrates have caused an increase in competition for potential students while universities have not rationalized falling enrollments by eliminating under-utilized departments. In 1992 4.43 million secondary school leavers applied to private universities while only 2.95 million applied for this academic year. The Japan Times MalaysiaThree Colleges Approved for Upgrade to University Status
The Star MyanmarMalaysian and Thai Cross-Border Initiatives
In related news, Thai education authorities are offering scholarships for qualified students from Myanmar to study at Thai universities. People’s Daily Pakistan France to Help Develop Engineering University
DAWN USAID Signs Agreement with Pakistan to Invest in Education
DAWN Singapore Berkeley, NUS to Partner in Establishing Center for Risk Management
ASCRIBE Newswire MIT Announces Plans to Establish First Research Center Abroad
The SMART center will serve as a hub for interactions between MIT and global science and technology researchers from the Asia-Pacific region. The center will be the first of a series of centers that the government-backed National Research Foundation plans to establish under the international Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise (CREATE). MIT news release French Business School Inaugurates New Campus
In establishing itself in Singapore, ESSEC joins other high-profile international business schools such as the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, INSEAD, and the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business that have chosen the city state as their Asian base of operations. Other international institutions of higher education that have established operations in Singapore include MIT, Johns Hopkins University, Georgia Institute of Technology, Technical University of Eindhoven, Technical University of Munich, Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Stanford University. ESSEC news release Johns Hopkins Research Center Shuts its Doors for Good
According to media reports published in late July, the university accused its Singapore partner of not fulfilling its “educational and monetary obligations” to the research collaboration. The project failed to attract top international scientists to the facility, a prior goal of the union. A clinic tied to the project, Johns Hopkins Singapore International Medical Center, will remain open. Houston Chronicle South Korea Number of Students Studying Abroad Increases
Australian Education International Ministry to Change Regulations on Academic Credits Earned Overseas, Award of Joint Degrees
The ministry plans to revise the current higher education law to allow individual universities to set their own regulations concerning the recognition of credits earned overseas. The current law only allows half of the credits gained at a foreign university to be counted toward the total credits required to graduate from a Korean institution of higher education. Revisions to the law could be in place as soon as next year, reports the Korea Herald. Other ministry plans include changes to the laws governing joint degrees between foreign and Korean universities that would allow for the award of joint degrees in cases where instruction has taken place outside Korea. The Korea Herald Universities to Introduce English-Taught Programs to Attract Foreign Students
Gyeongsang National University, Dongyang Technical College, Soongsil University and Incheon University will each receive US$55,000 from the ministry of education to begin teaching classes in English. Kimpo College, Daegu University, Yonsei University, Pusan University of Foreign Studies and Soonchunhyang University each received US$44,000 each to open classes in beginning Korean language. Twenty-nine universities and colleges applied for the program. The Korea Herald Vietnam Two New Universities Approved by Government
Voice of Vietnam
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