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Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from a recent edition of the Globe and Mail is more on Chinese students studying in Canadian universities and, perhaps, staying on or becoming residents or sea turtles – who return to China, or seagulls – who go back and forth:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/canadian-universities-falling-behind-in-drawing-students-from-china/article1313302/
There is a perception that the sea turtles are a net loss to Canada but that is not true. My own observation lead me to conclude that Chinese people who were educated in Canada retain considerable knowledge of and respect for Canada and, when the opportunity arises, will favour Canadian policy or business.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/canadian-universities-falling-behind-in-drawing-students-from-china/article1313302/
Canadian universities falling behind in drawing students from China
CAROLYNNE WHEELER
BEIJING
Thursday, Oct. 08, 2009
As a young adult just out of university 25 years ago, Henry Wang was among the first wave of Chinese students permitted to go abroad to study.
His destination, for the prestigious and then still-rare degree of MBA, was Canada - first the University of Toronto for a summer polishing his English, then the University of Windsor, and later doctoral studies at the University of Western Ontario.
His education landed him jobs with SNC-Lavalin and then the government of Quebec, promoting trade in its Hong Kong representative office. He would not return to his homeland until the mid-1990s.
Now, his son is studying in a secondary school in British Columbia; his daughter, newly graduated from a Canadian high school, has just moved to New York's Columbia University. They are the next generation of students eager to add a Canadian education to their résumés.
As China's middle class grows, a foreign education has become even more prized, and Canadian universities, colleges and even secondary schools are lining up in the hope of winning their share of new talent and tuition money.
"Canada always has a good image for overseas studies," said Mr. Wang, who now heads the Center for China and Globalization, a private think tank, in Beijing and serves as vice-chair for the China Western Returned Scholars Association.
"Having overseas experience, especially in a different culture, a different school system and a different value system, the benefits are felt in many ways. It's very useful, particularly in this age of globalization."
The number of Chinese students awarded visas to study in Canada has grown exponentially in the past few years. In 2007, 9,228 students from mainland China were approved for study visas through Canada's embassy in Beijing; a year later, the number had risen to 13,552, bringing the total number of Chinese students in Canada to more than 42,000.
Despite the global recession, recruiting agencies linking students to Canadian schools say demand for their services is once again higher than last year, raising expectations that the number of students has increased again in 2009.
"Canadian universities offer a high quality education to students at what is, when compared to other countries, a very affordable price," said Pari Johnston, director of international relations for the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.
Yet Canada - despite regular, direct flights between the two countries, a large Chinese-Canadian community and a reputation as a safe place for parents to send their only children to study - is falling behind other major countries when it comes to attracting Chinese students. The United States, the United Kingdom and even Australia all attract more students than Canada does. Australia, a country with 10 million fewer people than Canada, drew nearly 50,000 new Chinese students in the 2007-08 school year, for a total of more than 130,000 in the country.
"Canada actually could do better in terms of having Chinese students," Mr. Wang said. He added that a continuing dispute between China and Canada, resulting in delays in Canada gaining approved-destination status for Chinese tourists, is also a factor, since parents aren't likely to send their children to countries they can't easily visit.
As a result, Mr. Wang said, Canada is losing out both on the income and the talent that strong recruiting is drawing elsewhere.
Part of the problem, recruiters say, is that education is a provincial matter, leading to piecemeal efforts by individual institutions or provincial departments to attract students.
However, signs indicate a more co-ordinated national effort may not be far off. Canada's Speech from the Throne in November, 2008, pledged greater co-operation with the provinces in drawing international students. The government is now considering a proposal from postsecondary institutions to invest $20-million a year over five years in the promotion of Canadian education abroad, in hope of drawing top foreign students.
The first and most obvious gain for Canadian institutions is financial; international students' tuition fees alone can run from $10,000 to $13,000 for secondary school, and as much as $18,000 for a bachelor's program, and more for postgraduate work - a boon for publicly funded schools otherwise strapped for cash.
But there are other, equally significant gains, proponents say.
"What better immigrants to have than ones who are educated in Canada, speak the language, and who understand the culture?" says James Aldridge, country director for the Canadian Education Centre in China.
Canada also faces a fight over the future of these students, once they have finished their studies and have established themselves in the professional world.
Chinese authorities have successfully coaxed increasing numbers of these "sea turtles" - a nickname given returnees for their metaphorical swim back across the ocean - home, upping the ante for Canadian authorities to attract and retain graduates.
"We are seagulls, basically," laughed Mr. Wang, who coined the term in a recent book to refer to families like his, who now effectively divide their time between two countries.
"The global village now is getting smaller, and the trend now is going abroad."
*****
Canada by degrees:
42,000 -Number of students from mainland China studying in Canada
in 2008
130,000- Number of Chinese students studying in Australia - a country with 10 million fewer people than Canada - in the 2007-2008 school year
Up to $18,000 - Tuition fees paid by international students for a bachelor's program in Canada
There is a perception that the sea turtles are a net loss to Canada but that is not true. My own observation lead me to conclude that Chinese people who were educated in Canada retain considerable knowledge of and respect for Canada and, when the opportunity arises, will favour Canadian policy or business.