By Robb Murray
The Free Press
MANKATO
May 29, 2007 12:22 am
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Two years ago representatives from Minnesota’s Private College Council visited China to explore new opportunities in higher education.
At the same time, a group of Chinese visionaries was launching the first new liberal arts college in China since the 1950s, called United International College.
The two groups got together and today are fine-tuning a partnership that will give the Chinese school officials access to private college know-how and give Minnesota private college students and faculty the opportunity for meaningful study in China.
Patrick Quade, director of international education at Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, said private colleges in Minnesota already are developing programming ideas.
“Our goal is to provide many exchanges,” he said. There will be both faculty and student exchanges, one of which is already in the works.
Janet Moldstad, a faculty member at Bethany Lutheran College, was unable to be on campus when Edwin Kwok, executive vice president of UIC, spent a day meeting with faculty and staff there. That’s because she was in China, preparing to spend spring semester 2008 at UIC. Things are moving quickly.
What makes UIC so unusual in China is its liberal arts approach.
Traditionally, Chinese colleges and universities have been pragmatic in the extreme. In China, the communist government rules almost all of higher education, and the government has dictated that students will go to school to learn specific skills. Times are changing a little, and the UIC will be a dramatic departure from the Chinese norm.
“We have a meaningful opportunity to contribute to China’s reintroduction of the liberal arts into its higher education system,” said David B. Laird Jr., president of the Minnesota Private College Council. “As we’ve seen here in Minnesota, a liberal arts education has so many benefits, including the intellectual skills that are critical in our world’s rapidly changing, knowledge-based economy.”
Kwok said the transition hasn’t been easy.
“China has been trying very hard to change its education system from a Soviet system to a more American model,” he said.
Kwok is the visionary behind the UIC phenomenon.
For 27 years he has taught at and been an administrator for the Chinese University of Hong Kong. After first receiving a degree there, he obtained his master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of California, Berkeley. He has published more than 20 books.
Kwok has many ideas about what UIC can be, including his vision of a residence hall where the entire ground floor is occupied by artists and studio space, easily accessible to students coming and going from the residence hall.
The school, while probably not fully resembling a Minnesota private college, will emphasize education of the “whole person” instead of teaching skills applicable to a specific occupation.
Students will attend UIC for four years. While there, their education will be guided by several areas of emphasis: language, stamina and persistence, sports culture skills, environmental consciousness, an emotional quotient, culture and arts, voluntary work, adversity quotient. And all classes, unlike typical Chinese schools, will be taught in English.
The 17 institutions in the Minnesota Private College Council have long-standing ties with China with some dating back to the 19th century. The colleges have 15 exchange programs in place that will be complemented by the new partnership with UIC. Minnesota students from all member institutions will have an opportunity to study side by side with Chinese students in a Chinese institution where all courses are taught in English.
“This partnership is another sign of the private colleges’ commitment to deepening students’ understanding of the world we live in today,” said James Peterson, president of Gustavus. “More than half of the Minnesota college students who study abroad come from the state’s 17 private colleges.”
Bethany Lutheran College spokesman Lance Schwartz said Kwok came armed with a lot of information and is clearly enthusiastic about promoting UIC and working with private colleges in Minnesota.
“It almost seems to me that the situation — as most of the landscape of China — is evolving rapidly. Kwok is looking for partnerships on many levels. The opportunity, as I saw it, is to be part of a ground floor vision,” Schwartz said. “China is certainly the country with unbridled potential; the opportunity to bring American expertise and ingenuity is exciting.”
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Photos
Bethany Lutheran College President Daniel Bruss and campus chaplain Don Moldstad spent the day recently with Edmund Kwok, executive vice president of United International College in Zhuhai, China. The Free Press
Gustavus Adolphus College students Mengdi Wu and Tianyu Gao, both from China, visit with Edmund Kwok. The Free Press
The United International College campus sits in a scenic setting in Zhuhai, a city in southern China. The Free Press