Things best done together

Updated: 2013-05-17 08:40

By Ji Xiang (China Daily)

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 Things best done together

Students and teaching staff celebrate the opening day of the first semester at the Beijing-Dublin International College. Provided to China Daily

 Things best done together

Chinese students at BDIC tour cultural heritage sites in Ireland during an 11-day trip to visit UCD. Photos Provided to China Daily

 

A smart pairing of irish and Chinese Universities may have engineered a sea change in education

Like one of its three major courses on offer - the Internet of Things Engineering - a new joint academic venture between a Chinese and an Irish university looks to the future of international education and progress.

IoT, a "revolution of future networks that will connect all objects in our everyday life", is a top priority in the development strategies of many countries, and is incorporated in China's 12th Five-Year Development Plan (2011-15). Former premier Wen Jiabao heralded it as the "Wisdom of the Earth".

With an IoT market in China expected to be worth more than $163 billion by 2015, "unsurprisingly, there is a huge demand worldwide for professionals to work in this emerging and exciting field", states the bachelor of engineering prospectus for the new Beijing-Dublin International College.

There are now more than 1,700 Chinese-foreign joint educational organizations and programs in China, with 700 or so at or above undergraduate level. About 40 of these have created separate institutions, such as the foreign partner University of Nottingham Ningbo, or New York University Shanghai.

Surprisingly, BDIC, set up by the Beijing University of Technology and University College Dublin, is currently the only college in the capital that offers a dual degree at the undergraduate level.

BJUT may not have the cachet of China's top institutions, Peking and Tsinghua universities. Nor does UCD have the renown of Oxford or Harvard. But what they lack in historical reputation, they more than make up for in modern strategies and advance planning in international education.

And the Dublin-Beijing partnership was digitally quick off the mark when the opportunity rose following a twinning arrangement between the capital cities in 2011.

"The mayor of Beijing was very supportive of a collaboration between UCD and BJUT, and with that sort of encouragement, we were very happy to try to work with BJUT," says David FitzPatrick, provost at BDIC.

Liu Zhongliang, principal at BDIC, confirms that support from the Beijing municipal government was vital to BJUT being selected as the partner in this joint venture.

"Though there is still a gap between us and top universities, such as Peking University and Tsinghua University, we are still a key municipal university, and confident," says Liu.

It helped that the central government was behind the idea, with then vice-president Xi Jinping present at the signing of the agreement in February last year.

By September, the new college was up and running with its first 24 students at the BJUT campus. Administration is largely left to the Chinese side, with the Irish mostly in charge of teaching.

UCD already had experience in this academic role and saw it as part of its international development program. In 2002, it set up a joint program with the Software School of Fudan University in Shanghai.

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"UCD has tried to develop a stronger international engagement over the past five to six years," says FitzPatrick. "We see that as important because we want our students to be global citizens. We want them to be aware of other cultures, to have experiences of other cultures."

This resounds exactly with what the Chinese education authorities and parents want. For the wealthy and expanding middle class in 21st century China, that has been met by simply sending their offspring abroad to study.

More recently, it has meant foreign colleges and universities coming to China.

"Chinese students can have overseas resources without actually going abroad," says Wang Huiyao, director-general of the Center for China and Globalization, a public policy think tank based in Beijing.

"This both saves money and prepares the students for a future career in China. Also, new majors can be introduced, filling some major gaps in China."

Tuition fees for BDIC are 60,000 yuan ($9,800; 7,500 euros) a year.

"On the whole, joint programs act as an experimental pioneer in China's high education system," Wang adds. "It is good that they break some monopolies in the system and open the door to competition."

There's no set system to the matchmaking of Chinese and foreign academic institutions. It can happen in various ways. In the case of BDIC, there had been a number of exchanges before the marriage.

"Usually a lot of university programs of collaboration come about because you have some contact between academic staff, who get to know each other well, and it grows from that," says FitzPatrick.

Liu says that BJUT wanted to join with a university that mirrored and complemented its own disciplines - computer science and engineering - and would improve upon them through a new approach.

"Western professors are normally more down-to-earth in connecting with students, and the care they offer is real and of great value to them," says Liu.

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