15 Feb, 2022
China
has revealed expanded plans to lift its universities to world-class
level and nurture a wide range of disciplines as part of its push to
create a higher education sector to support the country’s economic
development. The
plan issued on Monday listed 147 universities and more than 300 of
their disciplines, from science and engineering to social sciences, that
it said should be developed to become “first-class”.
It
is meant to catapult more Chinese universities and disciplines to the
top by 2030, and was released by the education and finance ministries
along with the government’s economic planning agency, the National
Development and Reform Commission.
The ministries said
the goals were to develop top talent for the country, boost China’s
competitiveness internationally, serve national strategic needs and
encourage cross-disciplinary research, with the government set to
increase investment in scientific and new cross-disciplinary subjects.
China’s new family education law bars parents from putting heavy academic pressure on children
The
plan is part of China’s vision to become a global education power by
2035. Last year, the Education Ministry designated 12 top universities
to establish new faculties focused on building the country’s advantage
in frontier technologies, at a time when it faces increasing trade and
technology pressures from the United States.
“The
task of building world-class universities with Chinese characteristics
and bringing up the overall level of higher education is still very
arduous,” read a question and answer document accompanying the
announcement.
“Although the first set of goals has
been achieved, the progress still falls short of the expectation of the
[Communist Party] and people. We will continue to select advantageous
tertiary institutions and grant them certain authority to designate key
disciplines.”
The first two universities to
decide on disciplines that they want to further cultivate will be Peking
University and Tsinghua University in Beijing, according to the plan,
which said the intention was for the institutions to shoulder
responsibility and create a policy environment in which they could join
the world’s elite.
Peking and Tsinghua were the
only two mainland Chinese universities in the top 100 of four prominent
global rankings for the world’s top universities in 2017, when the
country first announced the plans to turn selected colleges into
world-class seats of learning.
Since then, other Chinese institutions
have joined those global lists, including Shanghai Jiao Tong University
and Fudan University in Shanghai, Zhejiang University, and the
University of Science and Technology of China, in Anhui province.
The
331 disciplines listed in the plans published on Monday comprised 180
engineering-related subjects, 59 basic science majors such as
mathematics, physics, chemistry and biology, and 92 related to
philosophy and social sciences, such as ethnology and Marxism studies.
The disciplines were chosen on the basis of their performance and the country’s needs, according to the plan.