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Education
to Open Wider to Foreign Investment
Chinese
educational sector will open wider, as economic, scientific
and educational sectors join international competition with
China's accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), a
top education official said.
"Higher-learning,
vocational, adult and secondary technical education institutions
will work with overseas partners to run corresponding schools
in China," Minister of Education Chen Zhili said.
To help
foreign institutions learn more about China's educational
policies, the Chinese government will work out a set of provisions
on Sino-foreign joint schools to guarantee their quality,"
Chen said.
Policies
concerning the investment from overseas individuals for operating
schools on the Chinese mainland will also be stipulated, Chen
said.
Moreover,
efforts will be made to expand bilateral and multilateral
educational exchanges and to accelerate the work of mutual
recognition on academic degrees between colleges and universities
of China and other countries.
However,
such institutions involving military affairs, police, politics,
party schools and preliminary education will not open to any
foreign organizations, though the country has become a WTO
member, the minister said.
Another
important goal is to cultivate higher-level talents to boost
the country's high-tech industries. "Priority will be
given to the nurture of talents with finance, trade, law,
accounting and management expertise to meet the demand of
economic restructuring caused by the country's entry to the
WTO," said Chen, China's first female education minister.
"Meanwhile,
in-depth training programmes covering WTO rules will be launched
among governmental civil servants and enterprise executives
to help bring their performances closer to international standards,"
she said.
The minister
pins high hopes on overseas Chinese scholars as well as domestic
university teachers.
"Chinese
students and scholars who study abroad are encouraged to contribute
to the country's economic development through various ways,
such as returning to the motherland, operating laboratories
and technological firms, or giving regular academic seminars,"
she said.
The ministry
will continue to implement the Hong Kong-based Cheung Kong
Scholars Program and the Cross-Century Talent Program, to
assist outstanding university teachers to gain breakthroughs
in cutting-edge academic fields, Chen pledged.
Higher
learning institutions have played an active role in the country's
major scientific programs in recent years.
Last year,
for example, universities undertook one-third of studies for
18 national basic scientific programs.
Some 22
university-born scientific parks and six university-based
centres for commercializing technological findings have sprung
up.
These
parks and centres will be further developed to help reinforce
technological innovation and fuel the development of information
technology, biotechnology and other high-tech industries,
Chen said.
Regional
education departments should further improve efficiency of
vocational schools, in order to upgrade skills of massive
labourers throughout China.
The country's
20,000 vocational schools have trained more than 10 million
specialized workers during the past few decades for agricultural,
industrial, medical, health and financial sectors.
"But
industrial and service sectors are still in need of highly
skilled specialists," Chen pointed out widening the recruitment
of senior-level vocational schools is significant for labourers
to compete in today's job markets.
Providing
lifelong education opportunities for the 1.3 billion population
is a long-term task, Chen said.
"Plus
regular school education, the Chinese government will speed
up distance-learning projects via broadcast, television and
the Internet-based facilities to open diversified learning
courses for people of different ages," Chen added.
In addition,
28 pilot centres have been set up across the country to promote
community-based education programs.
Such centres
are expected to be expanded to offer pre-employment and job-training
programmes for people, said Chen.
The minister,
who is born into a teacher's family, is also concerned with
education development in remote and poor areas.
She revealed
that the State has allocated 5 billion Yuan (US$602 million)
to further popularize primary and middle school level education
in central and western regions for the 10th Five-Year Plan
(2001-05) period.
China's
better-developed eastern areas have, basically, popularized
primary and middle school education, while the underdeveloped
central and western regions have much to be desired in this
respect, due to adverse geographical and relatively poor economic
conditions, sources from the Ministry of Education said. (China
Daily February 20, 2002)
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