Recent government policy changes, economic growth and the quality of institutional partners are supporting Asia鈥檚 growth as an聽intra-regional hub for student mobility, a聽conference has heard.
Speaking at 糖心Vlog鈥檚 Asia Universities Summit in聽Kuala Lumpur, Jazreel Goh, Malaysia director at聽the British Council, said there had been a聽鈥渃lear market shift from traditional East to West travel towards inter-regional鈥 travel, with countries including Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan gaining popularity as聽study destinations among Chinese students.
鈥淭he increased rankings among Asian universities are making it very, very much easier to look at quality partners and to have global expertise here in the region,鈥 she said.
Despite this shift, Western transnational education (TNE) remains popular, with British courses seeing 鈥渄ouble-digit growth鈥 at聽undergraduate level after the pandemic, and the number of students enrolled in higher education courses internationally (535,000) catching up with the number enrolled in the UK (680,000).
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鈥淭here has also been much volatility in the market share of international students鈥 enrolment to traditional main English-speaking destination countries, [whereas] TNE is often seen as a means of stabilising student mobility,鈥 Ms聽Goh said.
鈥淭ightening of student visa regulations in some of the major destination countries combined with increasingly challenging funding environments are pressurising universities and governments to look to TNE as alternative routes.鈥
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This meant, she continued, that there were significant opportunities for international partnerships between institutions to capitalise on聽Asian students鈥櫬燿emand for studying closer to home.
Indonesia鈥檚 director general of higher education, Abdul Haris, spoke about why the country has opened up to more overseas institutions, with Lancaster University and Deakin University partnering to set up a聽campus in聽Bandung.
鈥淭NE has an important role in [the] higher education landscape and also national development,鈥 he said, adding that the government wanted to 鈥渋ncrease the quality of higher education鈥, become more competitive globally and prepare students for working internationally.
Speakers at the event discussed the challenges of聽TNE in Asia, including navigating the multiple regulatory environments of both the host and the home country, as well as, in the case of branch campuses, being prepared to lose money initially.
Others said limited work rights in some Asian countries were also a barrier to enrolling more students from within the region.
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鈥淧reviously, we did get quite a number of students from the south Asian region, but that鈥檚 one of the ones that has not bounced back [after the pandemic] for us,鈥 said Linley Lord, pro vice-chancellor of Curtin University Singapore.
鈥淪ome of that is to do with them going places like the UK for work rights, and there are no work rights for international students in Singapore.鈥
Similarly, Elizabeth Lee, group chief executive at Sunway Education, said: 鈥淚n Malaysia, we have very strict immigration laws, and it really is not supporting the overall agenda of the 糖心Vlog Ministry or the Education Ministry, for that matter.
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鈥淲e just need to relax a lot more and allow students to come in to study and, when they finish, why are we sending these talents away? We should allow them to work in our country.鈥
Asked about India, where regulations were eased last year to allow more foreign institutions to set聽up, speakers said that, although there was a lot of opportunity there, the mix of state and national regulations made it complex and financial barriers remained.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very difficult to find a price point to make it viable,鈥 said Matthew Nicholson, pro vice-chancellor of Monash University Indonesia.
Nevertheless, speakers throughout the event were optimistic about the opportunities for TNE and its potential impact across Asia.
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鈥淎s TNE continues to expand and evolve in the region, it will likely continue to reshape the landscape of higher education in Asia, pushing boundaries and redefining traditional paradigms of cultural identity and national education frameworks in the process,鈥 Ms聽Goh said.
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