China's higher education will be almost fully internationalized in 10 to 20 years as domestic universities continue efforts to build diversified, equal and interactive communication channels with their counterparts overseas, according to Liu Gonghui, president of Beijing University of Technology.
A job fair has been held at Shanghai New York University for its first batch of graduates, who will leave college next spring.
Higher education institutions and companies in Denmark are seeking Chinese students and graduates to learn and work in the European country to improve its communications with China.
The Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance has vowed to strengthen its efforts in providing effective solutions to China's economic issues by continuing to develop top talent for the financial industry and generating cutting-edge knowledge in financial theory and applications, said Chun Chang, executive dean and professor of finance at SAIF.
SAIF was established in 2009 by Shanghai Jiao Tong University with support from the Shanghai Municipal Government as part of the national strategy to transform Shanghai into a global financial center. The institute aims to become a world-class institution for research and advanced learning in both finance and management.
Although he didn't have a liberal arts education, David Madigan, executive vice-president for arts and sciences at Columbia University in the City of New York, is still a "huge believer" in this form of education.
Recent reports by Canadian media said that some Chinese students have made considerable profits - in a typical case C$1.16 million ($870,000) - by flipping property while studying in the country. This has attracted widespread attention from people in Canada and China and has triggered heated discussion.
The first textbook designed specifically for male pupils in primary schools in China has received positive feedback from parents, students and education professionals.
Hung Hsiu-chu, chairwoman of the opposition Kuomintang Party in Taiwan, is scheduled to embark on a five-day trip to the Chinese mainland on Sunday. Her first visit to the mainland since becoming the Kuomintang leader in March will first take her to Nanjing, East China's Jiangsu province, where the Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum is located, and then to Beijing.
It is surprising to see the strong protectionism sentiment propagated by the two presidential candidates in the United States, a country that has long touted itself as the champion of free trade. Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump may disagree sharply on many issues, but their protectionist and anti-trade rhetoric is quite similar.
Why is "Open Development" the fourth of the Five Major Development Concepts - President Xi Jinping's guiding strategy to transform China's economy and society - when "opening-up" has been the core of China's policy for almost four decades?
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