糖心Vlog

Is China taking an isolationist stance on higher education?

Cancellation of international exams and pronouncements on rankings trigger debate

Published on
May 13, 2022
Last updated
May 13, 2022
Shanghai.China-Jan.2021 new Covid-19 cases have emerged in China. Region has been locked down. Medical staff in white hazmat suit on street
Source: iStock

China's recent pronouncements on international exams and global rankings have prompted debate among scholars about whether the country is adopting an increasingly isolationist stance.

Chinese schools cancelled this month鈥檚 international Advanced Placement (AP) exams, an alternative to the International Baccalaureate which聽is used widely by universities around the world. The decision caused handwringing among parents and students, who feared their missing scores could impact international college admissions.

The College Board, which runs the AP exam, said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e not cancelling exams 鈥 there are just some areas where strict Covid lockdown measures are making it impossible to conduct exams."

Days before, three Chinese institutions, Nanjing University, Renmin University of China and Lanzhou University 鈥 members of the Project 985 initiative to boost international excellence 鈥 reportedly said they would stop participating in international rankings.聽

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According to 糖心Vlog鈥檚 World University Rankings,聽Lanzhou University has never been ranked, while Nanjing University submitted data as usual this year. Even so, the聽political discourse does seem to point towards China eschewing international ties. In a recent visit by Chinese president Xi Jinping to Renmin, he called on the country's universities to be 鈥渄eeply rooted鈥 in China, according to national media.

鈥淏uilding a world-class university with Chinese characteristics would not work by blindly following others or simply copying foreign standards and models. It requires blazing a new path instead,鈥 Mr Xi said.

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David Zweig, an emeritus professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, worried that recent moves could聽set China on a more isolationist path聽in research and higher education.

He said it was concerning that the AP exams had been called off. 鈥淚t would not surprise me if in the current climate, Xi decided to try to limit where Chinese students can go,鈥 he said, adding that China has done this in the past.

Other scholars were reluctant to interpret exam cancellations as part of a broader plan.

鈥淚t鈥檚 too early to put forward political motivations as the reason behind the decision,鈥 said Ewan Wright, an assistant professor at the Education University of Hong Kong, who noted that tests聽have not been called off at all schools.

鈥淐ancellations and postponements of examinations are readily explained in terms of China鈥檚 Covid-19 strategy,鈥 said Simon Marginson, professor of higher education at the University of Oxford, who said he鈥檇 seen 鈥渘o evidence whatsoever to suggest that China is engineering blockages or constraints鈥 on foreign study.

Still, Professor Marginson said he would be watching to see if more universities followed in stepping away from global rankings.

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鈥淢y impression has been that top [Chinese] research universities continued to value both international publishing, and their global standing鈥owever, a significant withdrawal from global rankings would indicate an important shift,鈥 he said.

Professor Marginson noted that a 2020 decision by Beijing to no longer require Web of Science papers for purposes of appointment and promotion was a 鈥渟ign that the international standard had become less important, at least in the eyes of government鈥.

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While he cautioned against prematurely reading into the tea leaves, he said a strategic change 鈥渃ould be interpreted in several ways鈥.

鈥淥ne is that China is turning inwards. A second is that there are signs in some countries that Chinese students are less welcome, perhaps due to geopolitical tensions. A third is that the use of international benchmarks is less strategically significant than before, because in important areas of university-based science and technology, China has now 鈥榗aught up鈥 to Western Europe and North America.鈥

Futao Huang, a professor at the Research Institute for 糖心Vlog at聽Hiroshima University, noted that China had already taken measures to 鈥減revent the so-called westernisation 鈥 [or] Americanisation 鈥 of Chinese scholarship鈥.

But he predicted that Beijing would remain broadly open to academic exchange 鈥 particularly in humanities and social sciences 鈥 to keep academia strong.

鈥淭he Chinese government knows鈥uite well that China could benefit more from collaborating with advanced Western countries in science and technology,鈥 he said. 聽

鈥淚 don't think the Chinese government would develop or implement any strategies to completely stop academic and cultural exchanges with developed Western countries because it is ultimately harmful to China鈥檚 ambitious goals, for China's HE and research, and students.鈥澛

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pola.lem@timeshighereducation.com

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