2011年5月9日星期一

Briefly: China Said to Plan Campus in Laos

China has long been a favored destination for foreign universities seeking to export their programs, but now a Chinese university is preparing to open the mainland’s first overseas campus.


Soochow University, in Jiangsu Province, is expected to open an affiliate in Laos next year, according to People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party.


The report, posted late last month, called Soochow the first foreign education institution to receive approval from the Laotian government to offer undergraduate and graduate programs. The university plans to provide courses for about 5,000 students in Laos, a country of more than six million where only 13 percent of the undergraduate-age population is enrolled in higher education, according to 2008 Unesco statistics.


A university official quoted in the report said Soochow would offer 12 majors, including Chinese language and literature, economy and trade, and engineering. Soochow University, which has about 50,000 students in China, expects the Laos campus to begin enrolling students next year, the report said.


While the university will initially send Chinese academics to the Laos campus, it plans to gradually employ more local teachers. The campus is estimated to cost $25 million.


— LIZ GOOCH


London music college plans to offer degree in Singapore


Students in Singapore will soon be able to pursue a music degree conferred by the Royal College of Music in London. The college, one of the world’s leading music conservatories, has signed a partnership with the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts to confer, for the first time, its degree outside of Britain.


Intended as a degree course that builds on Nanyang Academy’s three-year music diploma program, the new program will give students the choice of five music disciplines: keyboard, composition, orchestral, vocal and Chinese instrumental studies.


The Singaporean government will significantly subsidize some tuition fees for the two-year degree course, to be offered starting in August. Although full fee for the bachelor of music degree course is 56,000 Singapore dollars, or about $45,450, the government subsidy means that Singaporean students will pay 18,500 dollars over the two years. Permanent residents will pay 23,400 dollars.


At the signing of the deal, Nanyang Academy’s president, Choo Thiam Siew, said that as the economic center of gravity moves toward the east, so too has Asian education, and correspondingly, Asian arts have witnessed greater attention.


“We have seen an influx of international students choose to do their exchanges or internships in Singapore, as well as witness more collaborations between Singapore and other international schools,” he said.


“The recent announcement of Singapore’s first Liberal Arts College through a partnership between Yale and N.U.S. is a prime example,” he added, referring to the National University of Singapore. “Our partnership with the distinguished Royal College of Music is another step in this inevitable direction of educational marriages between the West and the East.”


— SONIA KOLESNIKOV-JESSOP


Grant is offered to build Israeli liberal arts college


The Shalem Center announced Tuesday that it had been awarded a $12.5 million challenge grant from the Tikvah Fund to found what its sponsors say would be Israel’s first liberal arts college.


Israeli institutes of higher education typically offer three-year programs on a particular subject. Shalem College, by contrast, would be the first to offer a four-year bachelor of arts degree along the American model and would also be the first to feature an undergraduate senior thesis as a graduation requirement, said Daniel Polisar, president of the Shalem Center.


Although Shalem College would be open to international students, the main goal is to enroll Israelis. Classes would be taught in Hebrew, though plans are being discussed to develop a yearlong program for overseas English speakers.


“A young, democratic country like Israel needs thoughtful leaders, active, engaged citizens, and people as broad as possible in their knowledge,” Mr. Polisar said.


The Shalem Center, founded in 1994, is devoted to the study of Jewish and Zionist history, philosophy and political theory, and Middle East studies, among other topics. The grant by the Tikvah Fund, a New York organization devoted to the promotion of Jewish thought and traditions, is intended to encourage others to donate toward creation of the school.


— REBECCA APPEL


 

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