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China: Difference between revisions
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=== Post-secondary === | === Post-secondary === | ||
=== Higher Education === | |||
== China's HEIs in the information society == | == China's HEIs in the information society == |
Revision as of 13:52, 14 June 2012
There are major developments in e-learning in mainland China , and in view of increased interest in China from many European universities, a better understanding of Chinese approaches to pedagogy, technology and organisation would be helpful.
In contrast to the EU, some of the highest-ranking Chinese universities, such as Tsinghua University, have impressive operational capability in e-learning and have developed their own learning environments.
Partners situated in China
None.
Experts situated in Country
China in a nutshell
(sourced from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People%27s_Republic_of_China)
The People's Republic of China (simplified Chinese: 中华人民共和国; traditional Chinese: 中華人民共和國; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó), commonly known as China, is the largest country in East Asia with Beijing as its capital city. It is a single-party socialist republic comprising of:
- 22 provinces
- 5 autonomous regions
- 4 municipalities,
- 2 Special Administrative Regions (Hong Kong and Macao)
The country is vast, stretching for 5000 km across the East Asian landmass, and has a diverse landscape. In the north, near China's borders with Mongolia and Russia's Siberia, the Gobi Desert and forest steppes dominate the dry expanse while lush subtropical forests grow along its southern borders with Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar. The terrain in the west is rugged and high altitude with the Himalayas and the Tian Shan mountain ranges forming China's natural borders with India and Central Asia. In contrast, China's eastern seaboard is low-lying and has a 14,500-km long coastline bounded on the southeast by the South China Sea and on the east by the East China Sea beyond which lies Korea and Japan.
At 9.6 million km and with more than 1.3 billion people (a fifth of humanity), the People's Republic of China (PRC) is the third or fourth largest country by area and the most populous in the world.
The PRC is a major power holding a permanent seat on the UN Security Council and memberships in APEC, East Asia Summit, and Shanghai Cooperation Organization. China is a nuclear state as well as having the world's largest standing army and fourth largest defense budget. It is a fast-growing economic power having the world's fourth largest GDP in nominal terms or second largest in purchasing power and consuming as much as a third of the world's steel and over a half of its concrete. China is also the world's second largest exporter and the third largest importer. Since the introduction of market-based economic reforms in 1978, the poverty rate in China has gone down from 53% to 8% in 2001. However, China is now faced with a number of other economic problems including a rapidly ageing population, a widening rural-urban income gap, and rapid environmental degradation.
China education policy
China education system
(sourced from http://www.index-china.com/index-english/education-s.htm)
China has adopted a nine-year compulsory schooling system, which means all children are required to attend school for at least nine years. Students have to complete both the primary school programme and the junior middle-school programme. Higher education is only for those students who have passed examinations of all levels. Student must pass the entrance examination for senior middle schools or middle-level technical schools. After two, three or four years, they have to go through national college entrance examination for admission to universities.
Pre-school Education
Children aged from 3 to 6 will attend kindergartens near their neighborhoods, where they learn the basics of the native language and subjects. They play games, dance, sing and act. Children are taught from the early year the values of Truth, Kindness and Beauty.
Chinese take children education very seriously since they know that a person's personality is mould in the early childhood.
Primary School Education
The primary school education requires six years. Pupils are required to take a variety of subjects such as the Chinese language, fundamental mathematics and moral education. They also take part in sports and extra-curriculum activities. Foreign languages such as English are optional courses in the senior year of the primary education
High School Education
High school education has two parts, 3-year junior high school program and senior high school.
From junior high school, students begin to learn a variety of science subjects such as chemistry, physics and biology and other subjects such as history, geography, and foreign languages. Physical education is enthusiastically encouraged.
Senior high school education is a continuation of junior high school. Students take up specific subjects in either science or humanity subjects. Many contests are organized annually in all levels to encourage their study. The "Olympic Series" are the most noticeable ones.
The purpose is for them in preparation for the national college entrance examination. Examinations are designed separately for science and arts students
For Higher Education see next.
Schools in Country
Further and Higher education
Higher education in China is to train specialists for all the sectors of the country's development. Universities, colleges and institutes offer four- or five-year undergraduate programs as well as special two-or three-year programs. Students who have completed a first degree may apply to enter graduate schools.
University admission is operated on a centralized enrolment system, in which admissions committees at the provincial level are under the Ministry of Education. Admission is granted on the basis of academic, physical and moral qualifications. Special allowances are made for minority nationality and overseas Chinese candidates
The nationwide examinations are held in the first ten days of July. Candidate can take the examination in either one of the two categories, humanities or sciences/engineering. They apply for the institutions and departments they wish to enter in order of preference. Enrolment is determined by the examination results. Brief investigation into their social behavior and moral character is conducted before students are admitted. In some faculties, specific physical requirements must be met.
China currently provides free university education. Students do not have to pay tuition fee and are provided with free on-campus dormitories. Grants or subsidies will be given to students whose families have financial difficulties. The dormitory, which forms an important part of university life, is run by the students themselves through the students' union under the China Students' Federation, to which all enrolled students belong.
The education system is under reform. The number of paid students increases dramatically in recent years. The trend may continue and the government may eventually adopt a pay system instead.
Universities in China
(sourced from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_education_in_China)
Higher education in China is continuously growing, changing and developing. There are over 2,000 universities and colleges, with more than six million enrollments in total. China has set up a degree system, including Bachelors, Masters and Doctoral degrees that are open to foreign students. The country offers non-degree programmes as well.
According to the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China, the government authority on all matters pertaining to education and language, higher education in China has played a significant part in economic growth, scientific progress and social development in the country "by bringing up large scale of advanced talents and experts for the construction of socialist modernization."
New trends in Chinese higher education are attracting the attention of educators around the world. Since China began to develop a Western-oriented university model at the end of nineteenth century, Chinese higher education has continued to evolve. Since the late 1980s, however, tremendous economic development in China has stimulated reforms in higher education that have resulted in remarkable changes.
In 2002, there were slightly over 2000 higher education institutions in PRC. Close to 1400 were regular higher education institutions (HEIs). A little more than 600 were higher education institutions for adults. Combined enrollment in 2002 was 11,256,800. Of this close to 40 percent were new recruits. Total graduate student enrolment was 501,000.[6]
In 2005, there were about 4,000 Chinese institutions. Student enrollment increased to 15 million, with rapid growth that is expected to peak in 2008. However, the higher education system does not meet the needs of 85 percent of the college-aged population.
Polytechnics in China
There are many such institutions
Colleges in Country
Education reform
Schools
Post-secondary
Higher education reform
The Bologna Process
Other reforms
(sourced from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_education_in_China)
Since 1998, 10 universities have been targeted by the Chinese government to become “world-class” - including Peking and Tsinghua Universities. To achieve that goal, the government promised to increase the educational allocation in the national budget by 1 percent a year for each of the five years following 1998. When Chinese president Jiang Zemin attended the hundredth anniversary ceremony at Beijing University in 1998 and the ninetieth anniversary ceremony at Tsinghua University in 2001, he emphasized this ambitious goal of advancing several of China's higher education institutions into the top tier of universities worldwide in the next several decades. In the meantime, China has received educational aid from UNESCO and many other international organizations and sources, including the World Bank, which recently loaned China $14.7 billion for educational development.
Only 30 percent of faculty hold postgraduate degrees. This is a consequence of the lack of an academic degree system in China until the 1980s. Recently, internationally-trained scholars have entered the faculty with the goals of both improving quality and strengthening ties to other institutions around the world. The state recognizes the need for more home-grown professors.
In Spring 2007 China will conduct a national evaluation of its universities. The results of this evaluation will be used to support the next major planned policy initiative. The last substantial national evaluation of universities was in 1994. This evaluation resulted in the 'massification' of higher ecucation as well as a renewed emphasis on elite institutions.[
Administration and finance
Schools
Post-secondary
Higher Education
There are many private universities in China.
Quality assurance
Schools
Post-secondary
Higher Education
China's HEIs in the information society
Towards the information society
Information society strategy
The NREN for China is CERNET, China Education and Research Network - see http://www.edu.cn/english_1369/index.shtml
Support for OER
In China, materials from 750 courses have been made available by 222 university members of the China Open Resources for Education (CORE) consortium - see http://www.core.org.cn/cn/jpkc/index_en.html
References
See the China research pages at http://www.echinauk.org/cases/overarching/index.php which contain masses of relevant material.
Leading universities in China
(sourced from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_education_in_China)
It is probably wise to restrict any examples for Re.ViCa to universities in this list
- Anhui University
- Anhui University of Science and Technology
- Beijing Film Academy
- Beijing Foreign Studies University
- Beijing Forestry University
- Beijing Institute of Technology
- Beijing Jiaotong University
- Beijing Language and Culture University
- Beijing Normal University
- Beijing Sport University
- Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
- Beijing University of Chemical Technology
- Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications
- Beijing University of Technology
- Capital University of Medical Sciences
- Central South University
- Chang'an University
- Chengdu University of Technology
- China Agricultural University
- China Medical University
- China University of Geosciences
- China University of Mining and Technology
- China University of Political Science and Law
- Chongqing University
- Communication University of China
- Dalian University of Technology
- Donghua University
- East China Normal University
- East China University of Science and Technology
- Fudan University
- Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University
- Fujian Normal University
- Fuzhou University
- Guangdong University of Technology
- Guangxi University
- Harbin Institute of Technology
- Hebei Normal University
- Hebei University
- Hebei University of Technology
- Hefei University of Technology
- Heilongjiang University
- Henan University
- Hohai University
- Hunan Normal University
- Hunan University
- Jiangsu University
- Jilin University
- Jinan University
- Kunming University of Science and Technology
- Lanzhou University
- Nanchang University
- Nanjing Forestry University
- Nanjing Normal University
- Nanjing University
- Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
- Nanjing University of Science & Technology
- Nanjing University of Technology
- Nankai University
- Northeast Normal University
- Northeastern University
- Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University
- Northwest University
- Northwestern Polytechnical University
- Ocean University of China
- Peking University
- Qingdao University
- Renmin University of China
- Shaanxi Normal University
- Shandong Agricultural University
- Shandong Normal University
- Shandong University
- Shandong University of Science and Technology
- Shanghai Institute of Foreign Trade
- Shanghai Jiao Tong University
- Shanghai Second Medical University
- Shanxi University
- Sichuan University
- Soochow University
- South China Agricultural University
- South China Normal University
- South China University of Technology
- Southeast University
- Southwest China Normal University
- Southwest Jiaotong University
- Sun Yat-sen University
- Taiyuan University of Technology
- The Central Academy of Drama
- The University of Science and Technology Beijing
- Tianjin University
- Tongji University
- Tsinghua University
- University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
- University of Petroleum
- University of Science and Technology of China
- Wuhan University
- Wuhan University of Technology
- Xiamen University
- Xi'an Jiaotong University
- Xiangtan University
- Xidian University
- Yangzhou University
- Yanshan University
- Yunnan University
- Zhejiang University
- Zhengzhou University
- Zhongnan University of Economics and Law
Please fill in the External Evaluation Form
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