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Ministry of Education warns of study risk in US

邹硕 CHINADAILY 2019-06-05

The Ministry of Education has warned students and scholars who plan to study in the United States to be fully aware of and prepared for the risk of possible visa restrictions, as more students are running into problems.



For example, longer waits are required for visa issuance, valid dates have been shortened and the visa rejection rate is on the rise, it said.


Such problems have hindered students and scholars who want to go to the US for study or to complete their studies there, ministry spokeswoman Xu Mei said at a news conference organized by the State Council Information Office on Monday.


The ministry issued an official warning, suggesting that students and scholars assess the risks before deciding to study in the US.


▲ Xu Mei (C), spokesperson of China's Ministry of Education, attends a press conference in Beijing, capital of China, June 3, 2019.


According to the China Scholarship Council, 182 government-funded students and scholars failed to get into the US because of visa restrictions from January to March — 13.5 percent of the total. Only 3.2 percent of the total 10,313 government-funded students and scholars were unable to go to the US as a result of visa restrictions in 2018.


Since last year, the US has revoked or reexamined the visas of some Chinese citizens under the pretext of "counterespionage", which has spread from the natural science sector to the social sciences. 


Recently, some Chinese scholars in China-US studies saw their 10-year visas canceled, said Xu Yongji, deputy director of the ministry's international cooperation and exchange department.


"With the current China-US trade friction, exchanges and cooperation in education between the two countries is facing an increasingly complicated situation," he said, adding that the US Congress and administration have politicized some normal education cooperation activities as a "China threat" or "infiltration from China".



Some in the US have also said Confucius Institutes are tools to increase China's political influence, and characterized some Chinese students and scholars in the US as conducting "nontraditional espionage", Xu said.


"Such actions have harmed the dignity of Chinese scholars and students in the US and the feelings of the Chinese people, bringing a cold snap to Sino-US education cooperation," he said. 


"We hope the US side will correct these wrong practices as soon as possible, and make more efforts to facilitate bilateral education exchanges."



China sends more students to the US than any other nation, accounting for roughly one-third of the 1.1 million international students enrolled at US universities in the 2017-18 academic year. They brought in around $13.9 billion of revenue to the country, according to the Institute of International Education, a nonprofit organization based in New York.


Xu Yongji reiterated that China is willing to strengthen education cooperation with all countries, including the US. "However, education cooperation cannot be unilateral but must be based on mutual willingness and respect," he said.


He said the Chinese government will continue to support people in studying overseas and encourage them to come back after they finish, but free movement must be respected.


US enrollment might drop


China has been cautious about issuing warnings related to overseas studies. It issued only one warning in 2018 for students going to Australia after several safety and property incidents occurred there. One warning was issued in 2017 and three were issued in 2016.


Wu Xinbo, a professor of US studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said the ministry's latest warning might result in a further decline in the number of students going to the US, especially for those planning to major in natural sciences.


In the past, there were times when the two countries ran into economic and trade disputes, but education cooperation remained strong.


▲ An education consultant from the US, left, talks with a Chinese visitor at a booth during the 2015 China Education Expo (CEE) in Shanghai.


This time, however, the US has labeled China a strategic rival and wants to restrict Chinese students from learning their technology, so "we need to be fully prepared and take necessary countermeasures", Wu said.


Ran Wei, vice-president of New Channel International Education Group, a consultancy for overseas studies, said he would advise Chinese students who want to go the US to also prepare for universities in the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, as their visa applications might be turned down.


He stressed that educational cooperation should not be restricted, as it contributes to bilateral economic and trade cooperation and people-to-people exchanges.


Jin Yashu, a third-year undergraduate student at East China Normal University in Shanghai, wants to go to the US for postgraduate studies because it has many good universities.


She is aware of recent visa restrictions from the US, and said the warning will certainly influence her decision. "I will need to consider universities in Hong Kong if things do not get better in the future," she said.


Zhao Xinying contributed to this story.

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