打开APP
userphoto
未登录

开通VIP,畅享免费电子书等14项超值服

开通VIP
越来越多的外国学生来华留学
Global minds descend upon Chinese universities
Updated: 2012-09-01
By Luo Wangshu ( China Daily)
Two teachers at Peking University help David Corey Schultz from the United States enroll in the University's School of Chinese as a Second Language on Friday, ahead of the new semester. Wang Tiantian / for China Daily
More international students are working toward degrees from Chinese universities.
Alina Scalora sat in the middle of the hall filled with new arrivals at Peking University on Friday. The hall was crowded on the first day of enrollments for international students.
Although still suffering jetlag, Scalora, 25, who arrived at Beijing two days earlier, is excited about her new life as a masters student in the public policy program at Peking University.
The United States native can speak fluent Mandarin, but was humble about her language skills. "I can only speak a little Chinese," she said in perfect Mandarin.
It is not Scalora's first visit to China. In 2010, thanks to Fulbright funding, she stayed in Xi'an, the capital of China's Northwestern Shaanxi province, for one year to participate in a research project studying grassland desertification in western China.
"I'm very interested in environmental policies in China. I want to know more about it and China itself," she said, adding that this interest was her main motivation to apply for a masters program at Peking University.
Scalora is one of the 1,500 new international students at Peking University in 2012, and nearly 900 of them are pursuing degree studies.
According to the International Students Division Office of International Relations at Peking University, in 2012, 359 international students came for undergraduate programs, 367 for master programs, and 75 for doctoral programs.
Most of the international students are majors in social sciences. Majors such as international relations, MBA and Chinese are top choices.
Peking University has 3,300 long-term international students, and 2,200 of them are studying for a degree.
There are an additional 6,000 students who are in China for one year, to pursue short-term study at Peking University.
According to a teacher from the International Students Division who refused to be identified, there is a 17 percent of increase in the student population pursuing graduate degrees compared to the previous year.
"The increase has remained at about 20 percent each year since 2009," he added.
"Most of the students studying for a degree are from Asia, and they are already able to speak fluent Mandarin. The exchange program has taken more students from North America and Europe."
Tuition for international students is a little more expensive than for Chinese students. The annual tuition cost of social sciences is about 26,000 yuan ($4,200). Natural science and engineering costs about 30,000 yuan a year. But if the instruction language is English, the cost will rise to 33,000 to 39,000 yuan a year.
Jiang Ying, a staff member from the Overseas Students Affairs Office of Beijing Foreign Studies University, said BFSU has also taken more degree-targeted international students than before.
In the spring semester of 2012, there were 1,400 long-term international students at BFSU, and about 55 percent were working toward a degree.
The majority of them major in Chinese and international business.
The population of international students who study for a degree has exceeded the non-degree students since the 2011-12 academic year at BFSU.
Figures from the Ministry of Education show that over 290,000 overseas students studied in China in 2011, a 10.3 percent increase since 2010.
Among the students, 118,837 of them are studying for a degree, accounting for 40.6 percent of the overall international student population, which has increased 10.62 percent from 2010.
Lu Xiaopeng, director of the Chinese Division of the School of Chinese Language and Literature at BFSU, has witnessed the number of international students degree study programs grow.
"The increasing bilateral trade cooperation between China and neighbor countries has produced more job opportunities for students who have a Chinese university degree," Lu explained, adding that students from Japan and Korea mostly intend to study for undergraduate degree programs.
Ji Jin contributed to this story.
本站仅提供存储服务,所有内容均由用户发布,如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击举报
打开APP,阅读全文并永久保存 查看更多类似文章
猜你喜欢
类似文章
China: The Ultimate Brain Drain?
PKU Summer School 2020 | A Journey to China from Y...
Chinese students fill empty pockets of US schools
Number of Foreign Students in US Continues to...
Global Times - Quality, not scale, makes univ...
四级写译预测
更多类似文章 >>
生活服务
热点新闻
分享 收藏 导长图 关注 下载文章
绑定账号成功
后续可登录账号畅享VIP特权!
如果VIP功能使用有故障,
可点击这里联系客服!

联系客服