Zhao Haoyu never expected the summer vacation following his gaokao exam to be one in which he skirted celebrity.
Disqualification from competition for poor academic performance might be effective in forcing athletes to cram for tests, but more positive measures should be taken to guarantee their education, experts said.
Sakchai Kiatnakin has been teaching at Guangxi University for Nationalities for three years and has learned much from the experience.
A 30-year-old junior researcher at Procter & Gamble is unsure whether to stay with the company.
Ma Ying, head of talent acquisition for the Human Resources Department of Siemens Ltd China:
Even though a large number of multinational companies are localizing in the Chinese market, the salaries of leading overseas executives have not localized, and some have seen their salaries increase over the past few years, headhunters said.
Editor's note: Robert Parkinson, CEO and founder of the international recruitment group RMG Selection, shares his experience with job candidates for multinational companies in dealing with interview traps.
A growing number of overseas Chinese with higher education in medical science or rich experience in medical institutions are pursuing opportunities in Beijing, a necessary step in improving domestic medical services, as hospitals favor those with clinical rather than research experience.
Overseas scholars' research sheds new light on ideas and contributions from late chief architect of reform and opening
The Chinese central government's unflinching stand has been that the Tibet autonomous region should implement tailor-made development policies. In the late 1950s, Tibet went through democratic reforms that ended serfdom in the territory. In the 1990s, the region embarked on a massive afforestation and environmental protection drive. Today, natural reserves cover nearly 40 percent of Tibet's territory, compared with just 15 percent in the rest of the country.
With the new school session approaching, students who have not completed (and perhaps even not touched) their homework have found an easy solution to their problem: using the Internet to get their homework done for a certain price. "Two yuan ($0.33) per page, 10 yuan for one composition, 30 yuan for a hand-drawn newspaper..." The prices seem affordable and tempting to students fretting over unfinished homework.
Freedom, well nurtured, can grow to fidelity. - Eric Liu
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