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Greater China Education, School & University: News & Discussions

In the Computer Science programs, mainland universities are not too shabby either.


Here are the five countries with the most top-ranked computer science programs, and the top school from each country:

1. US (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

2. China (Tsinghua University)

3. United Kingdom (University College London)

4. Canada (University of British Columbia)

4. Hong Kong (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)

4. Australia (University of Melbourne)

Countries with the best colleges for computer science - Business Insider
 
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Japan and ASEAN are increasing academic exchanges. | JOSAI UNIVERSITY

The ASEAN region is increasing in importance as a market for Japanese companies because its member states are getting wealthier and accelerating their development. Hence, increasing the number of students from the region studying in Japan is essential to nurture future businesspeople or politicians to work between Japan and ASEAN member states.

The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology aims to increase the number of foreign students to 300,000 by 2020, from about 200,000 currently. ASEAN is driving the rise of foreign students.

As of May 1, 2014, Japan had 184,133 foreign students, up 9 percent from 168,145 a year earlier, according to the Japan Student Services Organization, or JASSO.

Students from ASEAN member states increased at a higher pace than those from other parts of the world. Over the same period, Vietnamese students increased to 26,439, the second largest number of any country following Chinese, and almost double the 13,799 from a year earlier. Thai and Indonesian students, with the sixth and seventh most respectively, saw 13 and 14 percent jumps, while Myanmar, the Philippines and Singapore, in the 10th, 15th and 29th spots, enjoyed respective 21, 12 and 22 percent hikes, according to JASSO.

Students from ASEAN’s 10 member states more than doubled to 38,970 as of May 1, 2014, from 15,095 in 2010, according to JASSO.

ASEAN is moving toward closer integration and more economic prosperity, and amicable relations with Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, would be a big plus. Japan, with an aging society and low birthrate, is seeking new markets besides China, making the geographically close and growing ASEAN market attractive. As such, Japanese universities are looking to attract foreign students, including those in the ASEAN region, while the college-age population shrinks rapidly in Japan.

Under such circumstances, the education ministry selected 11 universities in seven groups as recipients of subsidies — tens of millions of yen annually for five years from fiscal 2013 — to participate in its ASEAN International Mobility for Students (AIMS) program. The universities use the money to run exchange programs with ASEAN counterparts.

AIMS was initiated by the South-East Asian Ministers of Education Organization Regional Center for Higher Education and Development, to promote academic exchanges between ASEAN members and other countries.

“ASEAN was trying to integrate and Japan committed to contributing to ASEAN. When Japan offered to cooperate on AIMS, it was the only country in East Asia to do so,” an official from the Japanese education ministry said. “The program is beneficial for both Japan and ASEAN.”

Participating countries are Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei and Japan, according to the education ministry website. The program applies to a variety of academic disciplines, including hospitality and tourism, agriculture, language and culture, international business, food science and technology, engineering and economics.

Participating Japanese schools are the University of Tsukuba, Hiroshima University, Sophia University, Waseda University, Ritsumeikan University, a consortium of Hokkaido University, the University of Tokyo and Rakuno Gakuen University and another consortium of the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Ibaraki University and Tokyo Metropolitan University.

Under the program, students spend one semester in their foreign counterpart universities and the instruction is in English, except for Japanese language classes, and earned credits are transferrable between participating universities.

The Hokkaido University consortium’s program is dubbed “Collaboration on Veterinary Education Between Japan and Thailand: For the Sound Development of Asia.” It aims to train vets, as well as veterinary researchers and educators, to confront various problems facing Asia such as emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, food safety, animal welfare and environmental conservation from a global perspective with the goal of contributing to the sound development of Asia.

Their Thai counterparts are Kasetsart University and Chulalongkorn University. For four years from fiscal 2014, 25 Japanese and 25 Thai students will spend a semester in the other countries’ universities.

The University of Tsukuba won the AIMS subsidy with its project, dubbed “Trans-ASEAN Global Agenda Education Program.” The purpose of the project is to contribute to the Millennium Development Goals and Sustainable Development Goals, both initiated by the U.N. to promote international cooperation in tackling global issues such as hunger and environmental problems, by providing specific information aimed at solving such issues.

Students study food science, agriculture, international business, language, culture and hospitality and tourism.

The university has four partner universities in Malaysia, three in Indonesia, five in Thailand, one in Vietnam and four in the Philippines. It also has non-AIMS partner universities, with two in Australia and one each in Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos.

The Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (TUAT) consortium’s project is called “ASEAN Initiative to Foster Next-Generation Talents to Lead Environmentally Friendly Food Production, Technological Innovation and Regional Planning.”

The courses offered in the three Japanese universities are “Advanced Agro-environmental Science/Food Technology” and “Environment-Oriented Innovation Engineering” by TUAT, “Regional Sustainability Science” by Ibaraki University and “Regional Development with Tourism” by Tokyo Metropolitan University.

The exchange program also includes fieldwork, internships at companies and lab work.

The three Japanese schools have two counterparts in Thailand, three in Indonesia and two in Malaysia.

Hiroshima University named its project “Core-Human Resource Education Program for Economic Development, Trust-Built and Peace in Asia.”

Based on its guiding principles “The Pursuit of Peace” and “Collaboration with the Local, Regional and International Community,” Hiroshima University offers advantages of educational and research resources in each academic discipline and fosters core human resources contributing to peace-building based on the common economic development of Asia and the establishment of a relationship of mutual trust.

Students study in the disciplines of food science and technology and agriculture; engineering; economics; and Japanese language and culture.

For this project, Hiroshima University is working with universities in Indonesia and Thailand.

Sophia University’s “Trans-Disciplinary Human Development Education Program Aiming for Harmonized Diversity” aims to establish a new model for international higher education through collaboration between Japan and Southeast Asian countries. This program provides an educational platform for students from Southeast Asia and Japan to study together and analyze global issues affecting Asia and the world.

Students take a mandatory “Introduction to Trans-Disciplinary Human Development” course and several from electives, including “Basic Environmental Science,” “Culture and Society” and “Global Affairs.”

Sophia University has two counterparts each in Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines, as well as one in Malaysia.

Waseda University’s project is called “AIMS7 Universities Consortium Plurilingual and Pluricultural Program,” which will foster cosmopolitan people active on the international stage and pursue success at both global and local levels.

The seven participating universities are Waseda University and six others in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Brunei.

Waseda University offers specialized courses in sociolinguistics, language policy, geopolitics, international relations, history, security theory, anthropology, folklore, civilization, urban studies, comparative religions, environment studies, international business and economics. It also offers Japanese, Filipino, Indonesian, Malay and Thai language courses.

There are also courses on plurilingualism and pluriculturalism.

Ritsumeikan University is conducting a project, titled “Global PBL Program for Innovative Mind and Intelligence,” which is to promote collaboration at the undergraduate level with AIMS partner universities and provide students with the capability to think across engineering, business, society and design.

The university is partnered with Thammasat University in Thailand and Mahidol University, Universitas Gadja Mada, Institut Technologi Bangdung and University of Indonesia, all of which are in Indonesia. The courses to be taught at Ristusmeikan University for the project are engineering, international business, economics and language and culture.


http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...king-foster-closer-relationship/#.Vq3T2lk2H5l
 
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The Asian Conference on Education 2015

ACE2015
Art Center of Kobe, Kobe, Japan
Wednesday, October 21 - Sunday, October 25, 2015



2015 Conference Theme: “Education, Power and Empowerment: Transcending Boundaries”


IAFOR promotes and facilitates new multifaceted approaches to one of the core issues of our time, namely globalization and its many forms of growth and expansion. Awareness of how it cuts across the world of education, and its subsequent impact on societies, institutions and individuals, is a driving force in educational policies and practices across the globe. IAFOR’s Conferences on Education have these issues at their core. The conferences present those taking part with three unique dimensions of experience, encouraging interdisciplinary discussion, facilitating heightened intercultural awareness and they promoting international exchange. In short, IAFOR’s Conferences on Education are about change and transformation. As IAFOR’s previous education conferences have shown, education has the power to transform and change whilst it is also continuously transformed and changed. The theme of transforming and changing education continues into 2015.

Globalized education systems are becoming increasing socially, ethnically and culturally diverse. However, education is often defined through discourses embedded in Western paradigms as globalised education systems become increasingly determined by dominant knowledge economies. Policies, practices and ideologies of education help define and determine ways in which social justice is perceived and acted out. What counts as ‘education’ and as ‘knowledge’ can appear uncontestable but is in fact both contestable and partial. Discourses of learning and teaching regulate and normalise gendered and classed, racialised and ethnicised understandings of what learning is and who counts as a learner.

In many educational settings and contexts throughout the world, there remains an assumption that teachers are the possessors of knowledge which is to be imparted to students, and that this happens in neutral, impartial and objective ways. However, learning is about making meaning, and learners can experience the same teaching in very different ways. Students (as well as teachers) are part of complex social, cultural, political, ideological and personal circumstances, and current experiences of learning will depend in part on previous ones, as well as on age, gender, social class, culture, ethnicity, varying abilities and more.

IAFOR annual education conferences are held across the world, and explore common themes in different ways to develop a shared research agenda which develops interdisciplinary discussion, heightens intercultural awareness and promotes international exchange.

Sub-themes:
  • Educating through borders of power
  • Transcending boundaries of ‘self’ and ‘other’
  • Challenging and transcending learning spaces
  • Education and the boundaries of communication
  • Borderlands of being and becoming
We hope and expect the 2015 conference themes to inspire a number of research avenues, and look forward to discussing ideas, findings and synergies, in this International Academic Forum.


I was in attendance of this forum, actually. @TaiShang , were you there? Perhaps we bumped heads, lol.
 
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I was in attendance of this forum, actually. @TaiShang , were you there? Perhaps we bumped heads, lol.

I joined IAFOR conference on Social Sciences only once two years ago (I guess it was April 2014) in Osaka. The theme of this conference (Education) is slightly outside my expertise, so, it would be hard to get funding for participation, LOL.

But I am sure we will come across someday at some conference since I prefer to stay regional in my conference attendances.
 
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Asia especially East Asia-ASEAN is the on the unprecedented rise in terms of higher education. Not only u will see more Chinese universities in the ranking, but also more Middle East universities, South Asian universities and of course Southeast Asian universities. :enjoy:

http://www.topuniversities.com/univ...gion=71+country=+faculty=+stars=false+search=

QS World University Rankings® 2015/16
Top 200 (only Asian universities listed)

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@TaiShang @Chinese-Dragon @Chinese Bamboo @Mista @Jlaw @Bussard Ramjet @ahojunk @waz @Hu Songshan @Daniel808 @ahojunk @Rajaraja Chola @Götterdämmerung @CAPRICORN-88 @kuge @Nan Yang et al.
 
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The overseas Chinese miracle in Southeast Asia @Mista :enjoy:

2016 QS Uni Rankings: Singapore Universities Retain Their Lead
The National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore are first and third respectively in this year’s rankings.
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AsianScientist (Jun. 20, 2016) - For the third year running, the National University of Singapore has taken pole position in the 2016 edition of the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) University Rankings: Asia.

Nanyang Technological University, Singapore broke into the top three by coming in third, losing out by 0.1 points to second place University of Hong Kong.

Hong Kong universities have a strong presence on this year's top 10 list, with the University of Hong Kong (2nd place), The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (4th place), the City University of Hong Kong (7th place), and The Chinese University of Hong Kong (8th place) featuring in the top ten list.

Rounding up the list are South Korea's KAIST (6th place) and Seoul National University (10th place), and China's Tsinghua University (5th place) and Peking University (9th place).

The QS University Rankings: Asia is published annually and ranks Asia’s top 350 universities based on relevant criteria including academic reputation, employer reputation, student/faculty ratio, papers per faculty, citations per paper, internationalization, student exchange inbound and student exchange outbound.

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http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/nus-ntu-come-out-tops-in/2886870.html

Excellent thread! :-)

@Arabian Stallion , you'll love this! :-)
I believe more Middle East universities will be in the ranking in the next decade.
Years ago, u couldn't see even one (except Israel), but now they are on the rise at an unprecedented speed.
@Arabian Stallion @Kuwaiti Girl
 
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Greater China (mainland China, HK, Macao, Taiwan and Singapore) region has done quite well!
Overall surpass Japan+South Korea :enjoy:
@TaiShang @Chinese-Dragon @Mista

https://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/national/national-news/2016/06/15/469393/34-local.htm

34 local universities make QS '16 university rankings survey

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LONDON -- A total of 34 universities from Taiwan were included in the 2016 QS University Rankings in Asia released Monday by the UK-based higher education survey, QS.

National Taiwan University (NTU) ranked 21st in this year's rankings, up one notch from 2015, to remain the country's highest-rated university in the annual survey.

QS expanded this year's rankings to include the region's 350 best universities — 50 more than the previous year.

Taiwan had 12 schools ranked in the top 100, the same as last year, and 30 in this year's top 300, two more than last year's 28.

It also had the fourth most universities of any Asian country represented on the list, behind the mainland's 82, Japan's 74 and South Korea's 54, highlighting what QS head of research Ben Sowter described as a good performance.

Sowter said Taiwanese universities did well in this year's rankings because of their strong showing in research, with 26 universities seeing improvements in criteria showing the impact of their research (citations per paper and papers per faculty).

Seven schools also scored a perfect 100 in a new category — "staff with a Ph.D." — described as a proxy measure of an institution's commitment to high-quality teaching.

Sowter added that NTU's high ranking this year showed that Taiwanese universities can compete with those found in larger countries.

Aside from NTU, the five highest-ranked Taiwanese universities were National Tsing Hua University (31st),
(38th), National Cheng Kung University (39th) and National Taiwan University of Science and Technology (50th).

Across Asia, the top-rated university this year remained National University of Singapore, followed by the University of Hong Kong and Nanyang Technological University of Singapore.

Rounding out the top 10 were the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China's Tsinghua University, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, City University of Hong Kong, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Peking University and Seoul National University.

The most important indicators used to compile the rankings were academic reputation, accounting for 30 percent of the total score, employer reputation (20 percent), faculty/student ratio (15 percent), and citations per paper (10 percent) and papers per faculty (10 percent).

Other criteria were staff with a Ph.D., proportion of international students and proportion of international faculty, and proportion of inbound exchange students and proportion of outbound exchange students.

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@bobsm @TaiShang
 
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But ironically, my uni in this ranking is among top100 but in her own renowned ranking just top200. :D


I've heard before KMT fled to Taiwan, this uni used to be Chinese National Party's own school?

I think it is so even today, if only unofficially.

The school claims roots all the way to KMT's party school in Nanjing in the 1920s. After the defeat and KMT's retreat to Taiwan island, NCCU was opened as an extension of the original institution in the Mainland. But, I think, the strong KMT influence continued till today. Hence, you have the competition between natural-science oriented, Japanese-established, DPP friendly NTU and social-science oriented, KMT-established, KMT friendly NCCU.
 
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