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most chinese students today studying overseas are useless sons and daughters of rich corrupt people. they mainly go there to party, not study. the article is not wrong.
Hmmm...a research should be conducted to see why.
Its better if they are dismissed rather than letting them stay on and pay hefty bills.
In Australia when I was in uni, I remember reading about the university letting failing international students stay on in order to milk them. Some people are more capable than others and my time with students from.China showed me that majority have difficulty with english.
I was an accounting major and english required for the law and theory components of the degree.
The first thing is the language barrier. Not everyone is good at learning languages. It is one thing is fill a proficiency exam, it is another thing entirely to live by yourself across the pacific ocean and rely solely on your mastery to get around daily life and learning. I am from electrical engineering and our reliant on language is generally lower than some of the other major. I once ran into a few students from China and they are from the literature major. That's just plain masochistic if you ask me.
The second thing is age. Graduate student adapts better because they generally already has the experience of living alone, but a lot of young undergraduates simply doesn't have the experience and it can be pretty tough for the unprepared.
The third thing is difference in education system. Chinese and US school systems are simply organized differently. The difference is far from impossible to bridge, but it is still something to get use to and little things add up.
Considering there are 235,000 Chinese students currently studying in US, 8,000 (if it is true) would mean a 3% drop rate. In comparison, US university's freshman retention rate can get as low as 59%. (This means 41% of the freshman failed to get into the second year for various reasons.) University is a not a joke, kids, if you want to achieve academic success, you better work for it.
I never had accounting classes, but I did have history and economic classes. There is a lot of intricacies to grasp.
I don't really get why any Chinese student would want to do undergraduate in US. Not only it is much more expensive, it doesn't offer any advantage either. US university's strength lay within its research program, not in its undergraduate education. A lot of those 1 year and 2nd year courses are essentially remedial lesson anyway to makeup for deficiency in high school education.
That was one factor I had considered ; the language barrier as well as the culture shock. Perhaps we shouldn't dismiss the role of living in an alien / foreign society and how it can play a role in depression for college undergrads. Actually during my 1st year in the United States, I had dealt with issue of home sickness and living alone. So I can understand , can empathize with some of the difficulties Chinese students feel when they are adapting to life abroad.
As for literature majors --- I have so much respect for these guys. They're great sources for editing, btw. lol.
It depends on the graduate student's ability to cope, but i will agree with you in that generally graduate students have a greater resilience to resist pressures such as family pressure, home sickness, loneliness (a reality!) , cultural shock (at first its an issue, but over time its a no issue). I should state that as a doctoral candidate myself , its important to develop a support group when in academia , maintaining an introvert lifestyle with little to no communication and interaction with others is a primary reason why some grad students experience mental status changes, depression and the like.
In other words, get out there, make friends, and if you're single then go mingle! lol.
True. I think in the United States' Academic institutions there is a greater emphasis on EBP (Evidence Based Practice) as well CBL (Conceptual based learning) as compared to other academic systems.
Sure, good point.
If i may add, another strength in American academic institutions is their Liberal Arts Foundations.
Argh, Don't remind me of the the editing. During my first year undergraduate study, one of the professor asked, in the first class "how many of you picked electrical engineering because you don't want to take English class anymore". Understandably, a huge portion of the class raise their hand, just for fun. However, as we later found out, engineers actually require a lot of written skills. It is a different style from liberal arts majors, but nonetheless you require a lot of it. I still remember all the time I spent writing reports, gets sent back for editing and repeat. Pure frustration.
Though, like many frustrating things in academics, once you get past it, it is a great skill to have and you wouldn't trade anything for it. (That, and you get to see your juniors squirm just like you did)
That's actually a quite serious issue. In this day and age, a student can easily slip away and lock himself/herself in the room and still get work down. In other words, there are too few things that forces the student to come out and interact. Needless to say that is a breeding ground for mental issues.
I won't mention names, but here is a story I heard. One of my mother's colleague has daughter. She is about mid-20s and was attending grad school in Texas. The girl has a serious introvert problem. So one day we heard that she quit the program because she couldn't go on. The reason? She got criticized during a presentation practice session. I made sure I got the story correctly, yeah, she quit, because someone criticized her presentation, during the practice session. It sounds ridicules, but real world can be stranger than fiction.
New Recruit
How long until you get your degree? My Ph.D is about 1 year and a half away if everything goes smoothly.
This headline/title is not quite misleading, but its focus on the raw number rather than proportion made me groan
There were lots of Chinese students at my alma mater (an urban campus in the west coast is all I'm going to say) and what struck me was the seeming lack of support that the university gave them. It was as if they were ignored as soon as the school had their money. I wouldn't actually know for sure, but that's what it looked like to me at the time. But most of the international students were able to persevere and succeed anyway.
I assumed then that they self-organized and gave each other the support they needed. I wonder if the 3% that don't make it were the loners that weren't reached out to/couldn't reach out to the other Chinese students and professors on campus.
I dont trust China PISA results after reading this.
Currently writing my Ph.D Dissertation right now. Just finished the literature review section, now conducting tests. I have about 8 months left. If all goes well. lol.
***knocks on wood***
I dont trust their pisa on the beginning if they conduct test on nation scale they would be on par with U.S, no way they can beat Japan or South Korea.I dont trust China PISA results after reading this.