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1. General Development of Higher Education
Before new China was founded, there were only 205 schools of higher
learning throughout the country, including 65 privately-run colleges and
21 foreign missionary schools. There were 117,000 college students, 629
post-graduate students and 16,000 full-time teachers. In 1998, China had
1,022 schools of higher learning, with an enrollment of 3.41 million.
There were 736 research and educational bodies providing post-graduate
education for 199,000 students. The university staff of higher-learning
institutions numbered over 1 million, including 400,000 full-time teachers.
The scale of Chinese higher learning has kept expanding since the late
1970s, when the country began to adopt the new system of reform and opening
up, with total enrollment increasing by 9.9 percent annually. China established
its academic degree system in 1980. Under it, 299 educational institutions
were given the right to grant doctorates, and 2,292 institutions, with
over 10,000 tutors, were set up to deal with Ph.D. students. Besides,
there were 633 institutions given the right to grant master's degree and
8,248 bodies were set up for providing education for master's degrees.
By the end of 1997, these higher learning institutions had fostered 35,000
students with doctorates and 390,000 with a master's.
2. Reforming the Higher Education Institution
Higher education in China for quite a long period developed under a
planned economy, which featured institutions run by the state and under
direct government management. In order to develop a modern education system
of higher learning applicable to the socialist market economy now under
construction, reforms allow colleges and universities to be run by themselves
or by non-governmental bodies under government macro-management. Non-government
organizations and individuals are encouraged to invest or run such schools. With government control over higher education diminishing, universities
and colleges are given more powers to determine their own management style.
Some have cooperated with enterprises or found partners in other regions.
By now, over 600 institutions of higher learning have undertaken reform
by changing their way of management or merging and cooperating with others.
The old practice of government alone financing institutions of higher
learning is being replaced by a new one, according to which the government
budget remains the main part, while diversified sources provide the remainder.
Various social organizations are encouraged to invest in education or
provide funds for improving the infrastructure for higher learning.
On August 29, 1998, the Fourth Session of the Ninth Standing Committee
of NPC ratified the Law on Higher Education of the PRC. The law, of 69
articles in eight chapters, relates to the goal and principles of higher
education, its management system and establishment, organization and operation
of higher learning institutions, teachers and students, financing and
investment, and legal responsibilities. Enactment of the law laid a foundation
for healthy development of China's higher education, and provided legal
protection for reasonable management of the institutions concerned.
3. Adjusting the Structure of Higher Education
Generally speaking, the length of schooling for ordinary college students
is four years, except for some specialties which need only two or three
years and some difficult ones, such as medicine, requiring five years.
There were only 215 specialties in Chinese colleges and universities in
the early 1950s, increasing to 627 in the early 1960s. More courses have
been added to the university curriculum since the 1980s as a result of
social progress, including electronic technology, computers, energy, environment,
materials, biological technology, medical technology, light industry and
food. In recent years, the structure of higher education is being adjusted
to be more reasonable. Over 500 specialties are provided by universities
and colleges which fall into ten major academic types: philosophy, economics,
law, education, literature, history, technology, engineering, medicine
and agriculture.
4. Reforming the System of Enrollment, Paying Fees
and Graduates Looking for Jobs
Chinese universities and colleges were free of charge in the past under
the planned economy, and all the university graduates could depend on
the government for employment. Now, college and university students are
expected to pay some tuition fees (about one-fifth or one-fourth of their
actual educational expenditure). At the same time, the system of scholarship
has been established in almost every higher learning institution, for
which students with good marks are eligible. There are also some funds
provided for students who cannot afford or fully afford the fees. Universities
and colleges have adopted the system to reduce tuition fees for students
from poor families or provide regular living allowances for them. In relating
to the employment of the university graduates, a channel connecting universities
and employers has been established, through which employers and those
looking for jobs meet and choose freely. The talent market is now maturing,
adjusting the supply and demand of personnel, while providing necessary
employment information for university graduates.
5. Replacing the old philosophy in education with new
ones in order to foster talent for China's modernization drive. Renewing
the curriculum and educational methods so as to upgrade teaching quality
In 1994, the Chinese government worked out and promulgated the Reform
Program of Teaching and the Curriculum in Higher Education Towards the
21st Century. The participants numbered over tens of thousands in higher
learning institutions including presidents, professors and teachers. Based
on transforming education ideology and concepts, reforms were conducted
in over 100 specialties for training talents, moving toward the goal of
broadening the scope of special subjects and enhancing overall quality.
At the same time, the appraisal of teaching was started in various higher
learning institutions to gradually establish a teaching quality macro-control
system with Chinese characteristics.
6. University-Based Scientific Research
China has 600,000 scientific research staff in its institutions of higher
learning, of which, 85 percent are scientists and engineers. They have
achieved significant results in basic research, applicable research and
hi-tech research. Now, colleges and universities have become major bases
of basic and hi-tech researches in China, which are home to 100 key state
labs and 27 state engineering (technology) research centers. At present,
250 higher learning institutions have entered the China Education and
Scientific Research Network which is linked with the Internet.
Since 1979, institutions of higher learning have won 289 state natural
science awards, 907 state invention awards and 1,643 state science and
technology progress awards, making up 50.4, 32.5 and 23.2 percent respectively
of the country's total. The higher learning institutions undertook or
participated in 502 hi-tech projects belonging to the famous state 863
Program, 54 percent of the total, and achieved major results in the fields
of biology, information, automation, laser technology, aeronautics and
astronautics, new materials and new energy technology.
The higher learning institutions have also paid attention to economic
construction and applicable research, linking colleges and universities
with social economic production. They have participated in the construction
of hi-tech industrial parks, developed college- or university-run hi-tech
enterprises to combine production with science and research, and found
ways to transform their scientific research results into productivity.
For example, the Founder Group, run by Peking University, revolutionized
the Chinese printing industry with scientific technology and talents.
Now the group has occupied 90 percent of the domestic and foreign market
in Chinese newspaper employing desktop printing. So far, China's colleges
and universities have run 2,564 enterprises, demonstrating their ability
and creativity in embracing the coming new age of knowledge-based economy.
7. 211 Project
To meet the challenges of the world's new technology revolution, China
is now sparing no effort in carrying out the 211 Project-- to concentrate
its power on well building 100 key universities as well as some key subjects
and specialties facing the 21st century. By so doing, a group of universities
and colleges as well as some subjects and specialties may reach the world's
advanced level in the next century. The project was designed by fully
considering the actual conditions of China and is an important project
compatible with the state 863 Program. It is aimed at cultivation of more
high quality talents and thus enhancing China's ability in developing
science and technology. By carrying out this project a number of colleges
and universities as well as certain branches of learning may become a
leading force playing an important role in the development of the national
economy and social progress.
8. Opening to the Outside World, and Strengthening
International Cooperation and Exchanges
Since China initiated the reform and opening up policy in 1978, foreign
exchange and cooperation in higher education have become increasingly
active and marked results have been obtained. In the past 20 years, China
sent nearly 300,000 people to 103 countries and regions for further study,
and accepted 250,000 foreign students from 160 countries and regions;
it dispatched 1,800 teachers and experts to teach in foreign countries
and invited 40,000 foreign experts and teachers to work in China. Now
each year, an accumulated 10,000 Chinese scholars and experts are invited
to attend international symposiums and vice versa. The Chinese government
pursued a policy of "supporting students to go to study in foreign
countries, encouraging them to return to the motherland, and allowing
them to come and go freely," encouraging the Chinese students studying
or working overseas to return after completing their studies and serve
the motherland in various forms. In the past 20 years, 96,000 of those
students returned. At the same time, the Chinese government also positively
supported colleges and universities to participate in international exchanges
and cooperation in relation to research, cultivation of talents, and finding
solutions to major economic and social problems.
Starting from early of the 21st century, the High-Level, Creative Talents
Project will be initiated in Chinese higher education. The project is
designed to foster and attract a legion of high-level and creative talents
to work for China's higher education sector by adopting such systems as
appointing them academic leaders, inviting them to be professors, leading
teachers, visiting scholars, and guest professors. At the same time, the
Project of New and Hi-tech Industrialization in Higher Learning Institutions
will also be started to promote the cooperation of colleges, universities
and scientific research academies with enterprises. This kind of academy-enterprise
cooperation will improve the overall level of knowledge and technology
creation of the higher learning bodies, making them an active part of
the industrialization process of new and high technology. The acceleration
of 211 Project will prompt a group of major universities and colleges
and some key branches of learning to enter the world advanced level and
greatly improve their overall capability to make new advances. At the
same time, efforts will be made to strengthen the research on philosophy
and social science in colleges and universities, giving full play to their
advantages of Chinese think tanks and talent tanks. Studies made in these
higher learning bodies, which are related to the theoretical and practical
issues vital to national economy and social progress, will be enhanced.
By so doing, these higher learning institutions' ability will be improved
to great extent in both doing academic research and influencing government's
policy making process.
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