Thomas Jay Pritzker, chairman of the Hyatt Foundation, which established the Pritzker Prize for architecture in 1979, started his collaboration with Tsinghua University in 2011 on a program to enable students to learn from the world's leading architects. The program was launched to cultivate Chinese architects.
A tutoring program for Hong Kong students studying finance in Beijing kicked off in late October.
The Shanghai New Media Lab of Fudan University has partnered with several media groups to set up three new labs that will explore new educational models to tackle technological challenges.
A handbook on lifelong learning, which was revised by UNESCO and its member states during a forum in Shanghai from Oct 18 to 19, will be published in 2019, making it the first global guideline for the comprehensive management and pragmatic development of lifelong learning.
The Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City, is showcasing porcelain ware of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), a period considered among the best in Chinese ceramic-making.
In China, people with even a basic knowledge of Chinese history will understand the historical significance of Anyang in Henan province.
Travel to the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region is set to continue heating up this winter, as new events, policies and routes make it a hotter destination during the colder months.
Tourism is paving a new road to prosperity in Zhejiang province's previously underdeveloped Tiantai county.
In 1835, a 14-year-old boy left Anchay, his native village in the Jura Mountains of eastern France, close to the country's border with Switzerland. He traveled on foot, reaching Paris two years later.
An exhibition at China Art Museum Shanghai shows the drastic development of the country's society, economy and art scene over the past 40 years.
In Tongxiang county's Wuzhen scenic spot stands a hip-roof structure that was built during the reign of emperor Qianlong of the Qing dynasty (1644-1911), under which is a stage of more than 200 square meters.
"The hours of the days used to be slow. So were carriages, horses, mail," wrote the late Chinese poet Mu Xin.
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