Shanghai is
encouraging foreign students to study at local universities with a
package that includes scholarships and language-training programs.
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Overseas
students show their locally flavored food at an international cultural
festival in Shanghai University. [Photo/China Daily]
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Municipal officials hope the number of foreign students will increase to 70,000, a 45 percent gain, by 2015. The municipality will establish a
comprehensive scholarship system to encourage outstanding students to
study in the city, according to a Shanghai Municipal Education
Commission development plan for the 2011-15 period. The plan was
unveiled over the weekend. According to the plan, the city will increase
the number of government-funded scholarships and add a full scholarship
for undergraduates.
The number of international students in
the city has gone up in recent years. In 2011, about 47,700 overseas
students were studying in Shanghai, but only a third of them were in
long-term degree programs. The plan's goal is to have at least 70
percent of foreign students studying in long-term degree programs.
"We hope that a greater number of
outstanding students will come to Shanghai, and take long-term and
degree programs in the city," said Yang Weiren, an official of
International Exchange and Cooperation Department of the Shanghai
Municipal Education Commission.
Meanwhile, Shanghai is also encouraging
universities, enterprises and other social bodies to establish
scholarships and funds for deserving foreign students.
Last month, the Tohee International
Student Village, one of the city's biggest international student-dorm
communities, joined some universities to launch the Tohee International
Students Service Fund. The fund will cover apartment rentals for
students during their four years of study. Beneficiaries will mainly be
those who excel academically and are from needy families.
The first students to get city government scholarships to study in Fudan University were three Nepalese students.
The government scholarship will cover
their tuition, while the Tohee fund will grant their accommodation
subsidies, totaling 200,000 yuan ($31,500), for their four years of
study.
"Shanghai is an international
metropolis. The cost of living is very high," said Bikesh Adhikari, one
of the students who received the subsidy. "I was worried that I could
not finish the four-year study due to the high cost of living in
Shanghai.
"The accommodation subsidy removes my concern. And I can focus my attention on my studies," he said.
Fudan University has more than 4,000
foreign students from 118 countries and regions. Each year, the
university grants about 1.5 million yuan to its foreign students.
"Those who apply for higher degree study
in the university and are from top universities overseas, especially
those who are majoring in science and engineering, are extremely
encouraged," said Zhang Yi, deputy director of International Students
Office of Fudan University.
The city is also encouraging local
universities to offer more high-quality summer-school courses, lectures
and international exchange programs to attract foreign students.
This year, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
invited more than 80 overseas professors and scholars to give lectures
during its four-week summer courses, which were added this year.
"It's very exciting, and I like Shanghai
very much," said Connor Ryan, a student from Wittenberg University in
Ohio. Ryan had just completed Fudan University's international summer
session, which attracted about 100 students from more than 10 countries.
"Before I came to Shanghai, I had no
idea about the country. And this is my first time to come to a
non-English-speaking country," Ryan said.
"I learned some Chinese in my country. Here, I communicated with the local people and talked a lot in Chinese," he said.
Among the courses that Fudan University
arranged for the students were Chinese history and culture, social
science, politics, economics and management.
In a bid to help foreign students adapt
to studying and living in Shanghai, the city will establish a
preparatory school that will teach Chinese-language and computer skills.
The first batch of 60 students will start their Chinese study in
September.
According to the plan, the city will
establish a series of foreign-student service centers, which can provide
one-stop service, such as accommodation, Chinese learning and tours.
In addition, the city will establish 10
Chinese culture bases for foreign students to better understand the
country and its history and culture.
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