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China: Foreign education complexities

EducationWorld July 18 | EducationWorld
In many ways Zhang Dayin, a 30-year-old doctoral student of finance at the University of California, Berkeley, is living the American dream. He grew up in a small town in the eastern Chinese province of Jiangsu, the son of a physically challenged seller of lottery tickets. A decade ago he became the first person in his family to go to university — Renmin University in Beijing, one of the country’s best. The capital’s affluence impressed him. Zhang is one of more than 5.2 million Chinese who have gone abroad to study since Deng Xiaoping launched his “reform and opening” policy in 1978. The numbers are surging. In 2017, more than 600,000 Chinese headed abroad to university, four times the figure a decade earlier, bringing the number studying at that level outside China to nearly 1.5 million. The main destinations are English-speaking countries, with America way ahead. Between 2006-2016 the number of Chinese students at US universities has increased fivefold, to more than 320,000. They make up nearly one-third of foreign students at the country’s universities. And they contribute more than $12 billion (Rs.81,000 crore) annually to its economy, according to America’s Department of Commerce. The demand in China for education in the West, and the ease with which wealthier Chinese can secure it, has been a boon for many educational establishments. In America, cuts in state-government support have made public universities increasingly reliant on foreign students who pay the full fee. At Berkeley, that is more than $45,000 (Rs.30 lakh) per year for undergraduates. American optimism about the power of education to make foreign students more like Americans has a long history. “I can think of no more valuable asset to our country than the friendship of future world leaders who have been educated here,” said Colin Powell, America’s then secretary of state, in 2001. Yet American officials and scholars find it hard to demonstrate any clear diplomatic benefits from having educated some 2 million Chinese in America since the late 1970s. Among them have been children of several Chinese leaders of the reform-and-opening period: Deng’s son Deng Zhifang, Jiang Zemin’s son Jiang Mianheng, Hu Jintao’s daughter Hu Haiqing (by some accounts) and Xi Jinping’s daughter Xi Mingze (who graduated from Harvard in 2014). On the contrary, in the past decade relations between China and America have become ever more distant and strained. Students who went to America in the 1980s did show promising signs of enthusiasm for Western democracy. But China’s economic take-off in the 1990s, however, began to change those views. Students arriving in America since then have voiced mixed feelings about democracy and free markets, and how useful they might be for China. Now at Berkeley for a Ph D, Zhang has his doubts. “The whole world is getting confused,” he says, sitting in a coffee shop in nearby San Francisco. “Which system is good, which system is bad? There’s a lot of criticism of democracy in America and Britain. China is doing really well.” The nationalism
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