Implement the policies of reform and opening to the outside
world in China, the scale of foreign student come to China is expanding
constantly. Statistics of Ministry of Education reveal, the increasing degree of
the quantity of foreign student come to China has been keeping above 20% all the
time since 2000.
I think the reason for having several respects, firstly, with the development of
China's economy,a lot of world big enterprises, big companies are garrisoning in
China constantly, and economic development and exchange must promote the
international floating of professionals
Secondly, the degree of opening of the Chinese society is being strengthened
constantly, which offers more chance to foreign student give play to ability
Thirdly, magnificent Chinese culture is extremely attractive to a lot of
foreigners.
Fourthly, The great educational infrastructure in Asia, cheap cost wise and
highly reputed in technology, Engineering, Medicine wise,the availability of
instruction in the English medium., more and more Chinese universities have made
courses available to students in the English medium.
This has lead to an ever increasing number of students making their way to China
to study like the M.B.B.S/M.D/M.S/M.D.S Course and Engineering Course. Every
year there are more than 78000 international students come to china study. China
is fast becoming the most favored destination in Asia.
( http://www.bestcollegechina.com/study_engineering_in_china.htm
)
Engineering students to visit China for academic, industrial
exchange program
BY DAVID ORENSTEIN
At a time when many Americans are struggling to figure out what kind of
economic cooperation and competition China will provide, particularly in
technology, engineering graduate students at Stanford University and Tsinghua
University in Beijing will take a step away from apprehension and a step toward
mutual understanding.
This month, four Stanford students will head to China as part of a pilot
academic and industrial exchange program between Tsinghua and the Stanford
School of Engineering. There they will meet and study with four Tsinghua
students who in turn will come to Stanford next spring. Exchange programs are
common at universities but this one stands out because it takes place at the
graduate level of engineering, where research, technology transfer and
entrepreneurship converge.
"This program has a symmetric structure, designed to produce important
benefits for the students and institutions in both nations," says James D.
Plummer, dean of the Stanford School of Engineering. "It is important for us to
continue attracting the best students from around the world, including China,
and it is equally important that our students understand commerce in China as
the technology economy becomes more global."
Adds Zhiping Yu, a professor of microelectronics and nanoelectronics at
Tsinghua and an electrical engineering alumnus of Stanford: "Now two great
engineering schools, Stanford Engineering and the School of Information Science
and Technology at Tsinghua, will see their students spend at least an academic
quarter on each other's campus, taking courses, doing research and conducting
internships in local high-tech companies. The root of friendship and
entrepreneurship will be implanted and nurtured in the young generations to
come."
Building bridges with industry and academia
The program involves not only a student exchange over the course of the
2006-07 academic year but also student participation in commercial ventures in
each nation, Yu says. The intent is to give students—and their home
institutions—a detailed picture of engineering teaching, research and enterprise
in each culture.
"This program is important because it will provide an opportunity for
Stanford students to interact with future leaders in technology in China, an
important player in the global economy," says Xuan Wu, an electrical engineering
master's student who will participate in the exchange. "It will foster a sense
of an international community and cooperative responsibility."
Accompanying Wu will be computer science students Sye Min Chan and Jason
Herbst and management science and engineering student Mike Rothenberg. Their
counterparts at Tsinghua are Qiushi Ran, Ximeng Guan, Jiang Hao and Sheng Zhou.
In June, the Stanford students will fly to China for summer classes at Tsinghua
and internships at ventures including Intel's Beijing operations site and the
Tsinghua Nanotechnology Center.
"The purpose of this summer internship program is to try to have our students
gain experience in Chinese industrial business practice and the
technology-industry working environment," says Yinyu Ye, a Stanford professor of
management science and engineering who directs that department's industrial
affiliates program. Two of the Stanford students, Rothenberg and Herbst, will
continue taking classes at Tsinghua in the fall while also keeping up with their
U.S. studies via online classes from the Stanford Center for Professional
Development (SCPD), the professional education and distance-delivery arm of the
Stanford School of Engineering.
After the Stanford students return to Palo Alto, the Tsinghua students will
take classes and participate in research labs on the California campus in the
spring. The Chinese students also will have the opportunity to visit or even
intern with Silicon Valley companies, depending on visa constraints.
Next summer, if the pilot program has gone well, Stanford will send 10 new
students to Beijing to start a new year-long exchange (summer through spring).
Ultimately, the program could grow to include dozens of students each year, says
Andy DiPaolo, director of SCPD.
"I am excited to be part of the first Tsinghua-Stanford Exchange Program on
the graduate level," says master's student Rothenberg. "Stanford and Tsinghua
could set a trend in university education around the world so that students
everywhere may enjoy hands-on education about globalization and international
cooperation, essential skills for the challenges our generation will face."
David Orenstein is the communications and public relations manager at the
Stanford School of Engineering.
Some Best Institutes are :
East China University of Science and Technology :
http://www.ecust.edu.cn/
Dalian University of Technology, China http://sunsite.ust.hk/~webceng/
Tianjin University, China http://www.che.ufl.edu/~liy/DUT/
Beijing Univerisity of Chemical Technology, China http://www.tju.edu.cn/
Northwestern Polytechnical University
Qingdao Technological University
Harbin Engineering University http://www.hrbeu.edu.cn/