Taiwan is seeking to boost the use of聽English in its higher education sector, with growth in聽international student recruitment seen as a聽way of聽combating local demographic decline and the loss of聽Chinese applicants.
The Ministry of Education is seeking to recruit leading universities to join a NT$1聽billion (拢25.5聽million) programme that seeks to聽make half of all graduates from participating institutions bilingual over the course of the next decade.
That would be a steep climb, given that only a聽fifth of both school-leavers and full-time university lecturers have the ability to engage comfortably in English teaching and learning.
The new funding will support the hiring of new faculty and the development of new curricula.
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To qualify, universities will need to be teaching 5聽per cent of undergraduate and 10聽per cent of postgraduate courses in English.
Currently only 4.5聽per cent of university courses in Taiwan are taught in English, but that figures rises to 20聽per cent among elite institutions, reported.
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Academics expressed hope that the plan could support the recruitment of more international students from countries with high levels of English use across Asia.
Taiwan is contending with the same historically low birth rates that have hampered the sustainability of higher education systems across east Asia.
Even before Covid, about 100 master鈥檚 and PhD programmes failed to attract a single candidate in 2019, local media . Meanwhile, undergraduate recruitment rates are already maxed out.
鈥淭aiwanese higher education faces dwindling student numbers due to demographics,鈥 John Chung-En聽Liu, a sociology professor at National Taiwan University (NTU), told 糖心Vlog. 鈥淎lready, lower-ranking and smaller private schools are closing, and more universities may shut later.鈥
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Last year, Beijing barred mainland Chinese students from applying to Taiwanese universities, because of both Covid-19 fears and what it called the 鈥渃urrent relationship鈥, a聽common way of referring to strained relations.
Professor Liu saw potential for increased student recruitment via Taiwan鈥檚 New Southbound Policy, which aims to boost mobility between South-east Asia, south Asia and Australasia.
鈥淲e need to engage more on a person-to-person basis, and education is a good way to do that,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a worthwhile effort, to聽be global and attract international talent.鈥
He said Taiwan looked to Hong Kong and Singapore as two 鈥渂enchmarks for becoming HE hubs鈥. However, English has been a聽part of daily life and university administration in those former British colonies for decades, whereas Taiwan still has substantial 鈥渂ureaucratic hurdles鈥 for non-Chinese speakers.
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Chia-Ming Hsueh, a higher education researcher, told THE that 鈥渨hile the enrolment rate of higher education in Taiwan is as high as 90聽per cent and almost all high school graduates can go to universities, the problem of English learning among high school graduates has not been improved for a long time鈥.
鈥淭he main purpose of this policy is to help universities upgrade or transform from an institutional perspective, so as to establish a聽more friendly environment for foreign scholars and students, improve the ability of local faculty to teach in English, and therefore provide a gateway for local students to use English more fluently,鈥 he said.
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