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Thread: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

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    Default At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring
    March 6, 2012

    The number of Chinese students enrolling at Michigan State University has soared by more than 400% during the last four years, mirroring a national trend that experts say is attributed to increasing personal wealth and limited higher education opportunities in China.

    Chinese student enrollment at MSU has increased from 653 in 2007 to 3,374 in 2011, according to MSU.

    The biggest growth came between 2010 and 2011, when the number of Chinese students coming to campus increased by 69%.

    At the University of Michigan, Chinese student enrollment grew 19% from 2010 to 2011. And at Michigan Technological University, only in-state enrollment and students from Wisconsin outpace the number of students from China.

    Growth in the number of Chinese college students coming to the U.S. between 2010 and 2011 is up 23%.

    Jing Cui, 22, left China to come to MSU in 2009, where she is studying supply chain management.

    "Compared to the Chinese college that I went to, here at MSU I feel that I can do many more things as long as I want to," she said.

    Those who work with international students say the trend is far from over.

    "It seems to me that the wave of students is poised to grow," said John Lehman, assistant vice president for enrollment services at Michigan Tech. "In fact, the rest of the world is looking to capitalize on this. This is really growing."

    Thousands of Chinese students study in U.S.

    Jing Cui spent a year at a Chinese university but wanted to come to America to study.

    She applied to several universities, but made her decision on one factor: Michigan State University sent her an acceptance letter before any other U.S. college.

    Cui got her student visa and headed for the U.S., saying she figured that once she got to MSU, she could always transfer. Despite challenges communicating in English with her roommate and adjusting to American culture, Cui decided to stay.

    She is now one of more than 3,300 Chinese students studying at the East Lansing campus -- an explosion in growth during the last five years.

    MSU is hardly alone: 157,558 Chinese students were studying on U.S. campuses in 2011. In recent years, China has replaced India as the No. 1 exporter of students to American universities, officials said.

    Experts, students and those who work in international relations at Michigan's universities expect the number to continue growing.

    A number of factors contribute to that growth. Among them:

    • China's economy is booming, creating a rising middle class able to pay tuition at American universities. Tuition at MSU for international students is $31,757 a year, compared with $12,822 for the average in-state student. Total cost for international students is estimated at $44,827 a year, compared with $21,026 for in-state students.

    • China's one-child policy means six adults are generally invested in one child -- the parents and two sets of grandparents. They are often determined to make sure that child gets the best possible education.

    • China's universities are experiencing a space crunch. Not everyone can enroll.

    • A number of U.S. universities have offices in China. MSU says its China office is not involved in recruitment, but does offer visibility.

    • U.S. visa restrictions have become more liberal in the last decade, making it easier for students to study in America.

    Reputation a factor

    At the University of Michigan, first-year graduate student Yijun Wei of Mianyang, China, was motivated by another reason: U-M's reputation.

    "U-M is the best university I apply to, and it is very famous for its science," he said. Wei is studying math.

    At MSU, the bulk of Chinese students are majoring in business-related fields. At Michigan Technological University, many are studying engineering.

    The shared majors can help them connect with other Chinese students -- one of the challenges they face after arriving in the U.S.

    "A few Chinese students came with me," Cui said. "We met on the flight, and some of us lived in the same dorm. So when we first arrived, our luggage was delayed. So (MSU's office of international students) helped us to find our luggage and drove us to the airport" to get it back.

    "Also, we got lost on campus, but people here were nice to tell us how to get to the places we wanted to go. As international students, most of us had problems speaking English with American or understanding American people talking. I felt nervous, but the people around were very nice and helpful."

    International student offices at the universities help the students get acclimated. MSU starts the process when the students are still in China, hosting get-togethers. At Michigan Tech, officials offer classes such as winter driving and how to watch American football or hockey, run by coaches of the teams.

    Language also can be a big stumbling block.

    "I didn't speak any English when I was in China," Cui said. "We had English class every day, but classes were more focused on writing and reading. There was nobody that I could talk to in English. So the language was a big issue for my American roommate and me in my first semester."

    Cui said that living in the U.S. for 2 1/2 years has helped her to improve. Still, she is "working hard on my English."

    Campus diversity

    Michigan universities expect Chinese student enrollment will continue to rise.

    Applications at MSU from Chinese students are up 5% for 2013 compared with this year, officials said.

    MSU is comfortable with its numbers, said James Cotter, director of admissions. The university wants to keep about the same mix it has in terms of in-state students, out-of-state students and international students, he said.

    The number of international students isn't taking spots away from Michigan students, Michigan Tech officials said, but rather is supplementing them.

    Michigan's universities like the increased money they get from the students, but officials say they also like the diversity the students bring to campus.

    Tom Watkins, Michigan's former state schools superintendent who now does consulting work and travels extensively in China, said it also introduces American students to a growing superpower.

    He argues that most of the world's economy will soon intersect in some way with China, and Americans need to be aware of the culture.

    "Someone who is at our university today could be president of China 20 to 30 years down the road," Watkins said.

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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    And at least 1% are spies.
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    No Peterle. They come in young, learn English, Sciences and stay, find a GOOD job and work their way into the industry, and once in, they steal secrets. Whether government or industrial espionage is irrelevant.
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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    I keep gravitating to this page for some reason?????
    Beetle - Give me liberty or give me something to aim at.


    A monster lies in wait for me
    A stew of pain and misery
    But feircer still in life and limb
    the me that lays in wait for him


    Hey liberal!

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    You can't handle the truth!

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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    Quote Originally Posted by Peterle Matteo View Post


    .
    I think that girl has Scoliosis.
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    Quote Originally Posted by Malsua View Post
    I think that girl has Scoliosis.
    That ain't scoliosis.

    That's a bendable Barbie...

    /chuckles
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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    gran figa?

    She's afraid of something or she's pulled a train with the football team?
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    Quote Originally Posted by Malsua View Post
    I think that girl has Scoliosis.
    I'm willing to giver her a thorough exam to check.

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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    Quote Originally Posted by Peterle Matteo View Post
    Maybe you like this lady

    ?

    (REDACTED)
    You know Peterle, you have a unique way of making a thread great and then coming in and then pulling a complete 180 with it.

    I should give you the old Ban Hammer for that!



    At least put that nasty shit in a [ spoiler ] tag next time.

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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    /chuckles
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    I had to come back to this thread to re-read something and just couldn't deal with that nastiness.

    I put it in a spoiler tag for you Peterle.

    Ick.

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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    American Universities Infected by Foreign Spies Detected by FBI
    April 8, 2012

    The school’s campus in Dubai needed a bailout and an unlikely savior had stepped forward: a Dubai-based company that offered to provide money and students.

    Simon was tempted. She also worried that the company, which had investors from Iran and wanted to recruit students from there, might be a front for the Iranian government, she said. If so, an agreement could violate federal trade sanctions and invite enemy spies.

    The CIA couldn’t confirm that the company wasn’t an arm of Iran’s government. Simon rejected the offer and shut down undergraduate programs in Dubai, at a loss of $3.7 million.

    Hearkening back to Cold War anxieties, growing signs of spying on U.S. universities are alarming national security officials. As schools become more global in their locations and student populations, their culture of openness and international collaboration makes them increasingly vulnerable to theft of research conducted for the government and industry.

    “We have intelligence and cases indicating that U.S. universities are indeed a target of foreign intelligence services,” Frank Figliuzzi, Federal Bureau of Investigation assistant director for counterintelligence, said in a February interview in the bureau’s Washington headquarters.

    ‘Academic Solicitation’

    While overshadowed by espionage against corporations, efforts by foreign countries to penetrate universities have increased in the past five years, Figliuzzi said. The FBI and academia, which have often been at loggerheads, are working together to combat the threat, he said.

    Attempts by countries in East Asia, including China, to obtain classified or proprietary information by “academic solicitation,” such as requests to review academic papers or study with professors, jumped eightfold in 2010 from a year earlier, according to a 2011 U.S. Defense Department report. Such approaches from the Middle East doubled, it said.

    “Placing academics at U.S. research institutions under the guise of legitimate research offers access to developing U.S. technologies and cutting-edge research” in such areas as information systems, lasers, aeronautics and underwater robots, the report said.

    World-Class Talent

    Welcoming world-class talent to American universities helps the U.S. sustain global supremacy in science and technology, said University of Maryland President Wallace Loh. He chairs the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s academic advisory council, which held its first meeting March 20 and is expected to address such topics as federal tracking of international students.

    Foreign countries “can never become competitive by stealing,” he said. “Once you exhaust that technology, you have to start developing the next generation.”

    Foreigners on temporary visas made up 46 percent of science and engineering graduate students at Georgia Institute of Technology and Michigan State and 41 percent at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2009, according to a federal survey. China sent 76,830 graduate students to U.S. universities in 2010-2011, more than any other country and up almost 16 percent from the prior year, according to the Institute of International Education in New York.

    Finding Recruits

    While most international students, researchers and professors come to the U.S. for legitimate reasons, universities are an “ideal place” for foreign intelligence services “to find recruits, propose and nurture ideas, learn and even steal research data, or place trainees,” according to a 2011 FBI report.

    In one instance described in the report, the hosts of an international conference invited a U.S. researcher to submit a paper. When she gave her talk at the conference, they requested a copy, hooked a thumb drive to her laptop and downloaded every file. In another, an Asian graduate student arranged for researchers back home to visit an American university lab and take unauthorized photos of equipment so they could reconstruct it, the report said.

    A foreign scientist’s military background or purpose isn’t always apparent. Accustomed to hosting visiting scholars, Professor Daniel J. Scheeres didn’t hesitate to grant a request several years ago by Yu Xiaohong to study with him at the University of Michigan. She expressed a “pretty general interest” in Scheeres’s work on topics such as movement of celestial bodies in space, he said in a telephone interview.

    Unaware of Credentials

    She cited an affiliation with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a civilian organization, Scheeres said. The Beijing address Yu listed in the Michigan online directory is the same as the Academy of Equipment Command & Technology, where instructors train Chinese military cadets and officers. Scheeres said he wasn’t aware of that military connection, nor that Yu co-wrote a 2004 article on improving the precision of anti- satellite weapons.

    Once Yu arrived, her questions made him uncomfortable, said Scheeres, who now teaches at the University of Colorado. As a result, he stopped accepting visiting scholars from China.

    “It was pretty clear to me that the stuff she was interested in probably had some military satellite-orbit applications,” he said. “Once I saw that, I didn’t really tell her anything new, or anything that couldn’t be published. I didn’t engage that deeply with her.”

    Wrote About NASA

    Yu later wrote a paper on the implications for space warfare of the NASA Deep Impact mission, which sent a spacecraft to collide with a comet. She couldn’t be reached for comment.

    American universities have also trained Chinese researchers who later committed corporate espionage. Hanjuan Jin, a former software engineer at Motorola Inc., was found guilty in February in federal court of stealing the Schaumburg, Illinois-based company’s trade secrets and acquitted of charges she did so to benefit China’s military. She is scheduled for sentencing in May and has also filed a motion for a new trial.

    Jin joined the company, now known as Motorola Solutions Inc. (MOT), after earning a master’s degree from the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. While at Motorola, she received a second master’s, this time in computer science, from the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. IIT’s own research wasn’t compromised, institute spokesman Evan Venie said in an e-mail. A Notre Dame spokesman declined to comment.

    Study Abroad Targets

    More Americans are heading overseas for schooling, becoming potential targets for intelligence services, Figliuzzi said. More than 270,000 Americans studied abroad for credit in 2009- 2010, up 4 percent from the year before. President Barack Obama has announced an initiative to send 100,000 American students to China, and China has committed 10,000 scholarships for them.

    As a junior at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan, Glenn Duffie Shriver studied at East China Normal University in Shanghai. After graduation, he fell in with Chinese agents, who paid him more than $70,000. At their request, he returned to the U.S. and applied for jobs in the State Department and the CIA. He was sentenced to four years in prison in January 2011 after pleading guilty to conspiring to provide national-defense information to intelligence officers of the People’s Republic of China.

    “Study-abroad programs are an attractive target. Foreign security services find young, bright U.S. kids in science or politics, it’s worth winning them over,” Figliuzzi said.

    Front Companies

    Unlike its counterparts in other countries, which rely on their own operatives, China’s intelligence service deploys a freelance network including students, researchers and false- front companies, said David Major, president of the Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies in Falls Church, Virginia and a former FBI official.

    China has “lots of students who either are forced to or volunteer to collect information,” he said. “I’ve heard it said, ‘If it wanted to steal a beach, Russia would send a forklift. China would send a thousand people who would pick up a grain of sand at a time.’”

    China also has more than 3,000 front companies in the U.S. “for the sole purpose of acquiring our technology,” former CIA officer S. Eugene Poteat, president of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers in McLean, Virginia, wrote in the fall/winter 2006-2007 edition of “Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies.”

    U.S. and Canadian universities reaped $2.5 billion in 2011 from licensing technology, up from $222 million in 1991, according to the Association of University Technology Managers in Deerfield, Illinois.

    ‘Opened Some Eyes’

    Universities “may not fully grasp exactly who they’re spinning off their inventions to,” Figliuzzi said. “The company could be a front for a foreign power, and often is. We share specific intelligence with university presidents, and we’ve opened some eyes.”

    Michigan State’s Simon learned to be wary of front companies by serving on the National Security Higher Education Advisory Board, established by the FBI and CIA in 2005. It “makes you more aware that you need to look below the surface of some of these offers,” she said. “A short-term solution may turn into an institutional embarrassment.”

    Arizona State University President Michael Crow also sits on the board. “It’s all a little perplexing and overwhelming,” he said. “We’re in the business of trying to recruit more students from China. We’re operating at a total openness mode, while we recognize there are people working beyond the rules to acquire information.”

    The Chinese embassy in Washington and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing didn’t respond to e-mailed questions.

    Enabling China

    Over the years, American universities have enabled China “to leapfrog into the cutting edge of military capability on the way to superpower status,” Richard Fisher, senior fellow on Asian Military Affairs at the International Assessment and Strategy Center in Alexandria, Virginia, said in an e-mail.

    Chen Dingchang, the head of a Chinese military-sponsored working group on anti-satellite technology, led a delegation in 1998 to the University of Florida to learn about diamond-coating manufacturing, used in missile seekers and other systems, said Mark Stokes, executive director of the Project 2049 Institute in Arlington, Virginia, which studies Chinese aerospace technology. In a 1999 report in a Chinese journal, the authors, including Chen, said the university’s cooperation would assist in overcoming a technical bottleneck in China’s development of anti-satellite warheads.

    ‘Unlikely to Advertise’

    “A university may not know that a visiting engineer could be conducting sponsored research on a military program that could hurt Americans in the event of a conflict,” Stokes said. “An engineer supporting a People’s Liberation Army program is unlikely to advertise his or her purpose.”

    The University of Florida is “unable to verify” the incident, spokesman Stephen Orlando said.

    Chen is a technology adviser at China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp., which didn’t respond to an interview request.

    University administrators have traditionally viewed their role as safeguarding academic freedom and making sure that all students, domestic or foreign, are treated the same.

    “I’ve been to campuses where deans would say to Chinese students, ‘The FBI is coming to talk to you. You have no responsibility to talk to them,’” Major said. “Very hostile environments.”

    Some faculty members remain uneasy about a partnership with federal investigators. “The FBI thrives on a certain degree of paranoia, and it operates in secrecy,” said David Gibbs, a history professor at the University of Arizona. “The secrecy goes against so much of what universities are about, which is openness and transparency.”

    Stanford University

    Stanford University avoids seeking contracts for “export- controlled” research, which only Americans can work on without a license because it has implications for economic or national security.

    “Stanford does not, nor will it, restrict participation of students on the basis of citizenship,” President John Hennessy testified at a January 2010, congressional hearing in Palo Alto, California. More than half of Stanford’s doctoral candidates in the physical sciences and engineering come from outside the U.S., he said.

    Asked by Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican congressman from California, if he had read that Chinese military intelligence uses Chinese students, Hennessy said, “I am aware of that.”

    “Universities need to think that they are patriotic Americans, too,” Rohrabacher responded.

    Hennessy is on sabbatical and unavailable to comment, Lisa Lapin, a Stanford spokeswoman, said in an e-mail.

    More Collaboration

    After becoming Pennsylvania State University president in 1995, Graham Spanier sought closer collaboration with law enforcement. Reading that a president at another state university expressed shock that a faculty member was under investigation for terrorist ties, he resolved not to be similarly taken aback. He arranged a meeting with representatives of national security agencies including the FBI, CIA, Secret Service and Naval Criminal Investigative Service.

    “This had never occurred before,” Spanier said in a phone interview. “Nobody from higher education had reached out.”

    If they were making inquiries at Penn State, they should let him know, and he would help, Spanier told them. “That began a very fruitful collaboration,” he said.

    Shifting priorities after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to terrorism and espionage from organized crime and kidnapping, the FBI expanded the Penn State model into a national board.

    Handpicked Board

    Spanier approached other university presidents, and 90 percent agreed to serve, he said. Michigan State’s Simon took over as chair after Spanier stepped down as Penn State president last November in the wake of a scandal over sex-abuse allegations against a former assistant football coach. Simon and the FBI and CIA have agreed to expand the board and start a subcommittee on cyber-hacking.

    The FBI handpicks universities for the board, Figliuzzi said. It looks at how much research they conduct, as well as “sensitive cases -- where is there a potential problem? Then we make an invitation.”

    Board members must have security clearances. FBI officials brief them about cases on their campuses, and the presidents in return guide federal investigators through the thickets of higher education.

    Problem Solved

    When a foreign entity compromised the computer system of a major university, the bureau contacted the school’s information- technology administrators, who denied that they had a security breach. The FBI consulted Spanier, who persuaded the university’s president to meet with the bureau.

    “That opened the door to a higher level of cooperation,” he said. “The problem was solved.”

    Similarly, the bureau warned Simon that research in behavioral science by a foreign graduate student at Michigan State “might breach the security of corporate America,” she said. “We were able to find a way for the student to complete his research and still modify it in a way that took away the national security issues.”

    Beyond resolving such cases, the FBI has also alerted board members to the overall threat, most dramatically through a presentation by a former Russian spy. As a colonel in Russian intelligence and its deputy resident in New York from 1995 to 2000, Sergei Tretyakov set his sights on Columbia University and New York University, according to “Comrade J: The Untold Secrets of Russia’s Master Spy in America After the End of the Cold War” (2008), by Pete Earley.

    Mingled With Professors

    “We often targeted academics because their job was to share knowledge and information by teaching it to others, and this made them less guarded than, say, UN diplomats,” Earley quoted Tretyakov as saying. A typical task was to obtain information about “a study of genetically engineered food being done at New York University.”

    At the board meeting, Tretyakov described to the presidents how Russian spies used to go to campus events and mingle with professors. “It certainly seemed very bold to me that they felt they could interact with faculty and students and attend seminars,” Spanier said. “We never really think about that happening on our campuses.”

    In 2009, around the time Tretyakov was briefing the presidents, a Russian spy, Lidiya Guryeva, was pursuing a master’s degree in business at Columbia under the name Cynthia Murphy, the 2011 FBI report said. Russian intelligence instructed her to strengthen “ties w. classmates on daily basis incl. professors who can help in job search and who will have (or already have) access to secret info,” and to report on their potential “to be recruited by Service.”

    Columbia and NYU declined to comment.

    Tretyakov died in June 2010. That month, Guryeva was arrested for acting as an agent of a foreign power and deported to Russia.

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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    Infected is a great word.

    Because once you get into the collegiate mainstream and get a degree, or even just experience, you can wind up say, at my work place as an intern for the summer....

    Which is coming up now.
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    Default Re: At Michigan Universities, Enrollment Of Chinese Students Is Soaring

    Why the Chinese are flocking to U.S. colleges

    By William Bennett, CNN Contributor
    updated 7:39 AM EDT, Thu May 31, 2012


    A view of McCosh Hall, built in 1906, on the Princeton University campus in New Jersey. William Bennett says many Chinese want their children to attend U.S. universities.


    STORY HIGHLIGHTS

    • William Bennett: Many Chinese yearn to send their children to U.S. universities
    • Bennett: Chinese students better prepared in science, math; parental expectations higher
    • In China, U.S. colleges represent freedom, individualism, self-improvement, he says
    • He warns that U.S. must approach education as focused as the Chinese

    (CNN) -- American higher education is in the cross hairs of a heated national debate over the value and cost of a college degree. Yet in China, our fiercest global economic competitor, the popularity of American colleges and universities might be at an all-time high.

    I just returned from a trip to Beijing, where I spoke with Chinese parents about the value of American education, where we excel and where we fall short. Not surprising was the extent to which the Chinese value education, especially primary and secondary education, and yearn for their children to attend American universities, and if possible, stay in America.

    When I engaged Chinese parents about their children, they would often say, "My son (or daughter) is going to Princeton (or fill in the elite American university)." I would respond, "Great! What year is your son or daughter right now?" And they would say, "Three years old."

    This passion for education starting at such an early age is powerful. After meeting with Chinese teachers, parents and children, three differences were immediately clear.

    First, their children are better educated than American children in the STEM fields -- science, technology, engineering and math. High standards and high expectations are the norm in China, not the exception, as is often the case in the United States.

    Second, Chinese parents will sacrifice almost anything for their child's education. They realize firsthand, "History is a race between education and catastrophe," as H.G. Wells put it. In China, the disposable income of middle-class families is more likely to be spent on education than leisure or entertainment.

    Third, to the Chinese people, American universities, for all their shortcomings and blemishes, are still beacons of freedom, individualism and self-improvement. To them, our universities are emblems of the highest achievement.

    In Asia, they have a saying: "The protruding nail gets hammered down." In America, we give awards for protruding nails.

    Our standards should be higher and our achievement better, but we still remain a land of unlimited opportunity. Each of my speeches in China began by reminding the Chinese people of the three, quintessential American values engraved, on our currency: Liberty, In God We Trust and E. Pluribus Unum.

    Politically, we may be at odds with the Chinese regime, but its people desperately long for a taste of American autonomy. RISE China, the private international education company that invited me to China and for which I am a compensated senior adviser, focuses on teaching idiomatic English to Chinese students to help them get into American universities.

    It also helps Chinese students develop confidence, initiative, commitment and active learning -- all qualities that are cherished by our higher institutions.

    As a result, the number of Chinese undergraduate students in the U.S. has doubled in the past two years. In the 2006-07 academic year, 9,955 Chinese undergraduates enrolled in U.S. schools. The next year, that figure jumped to 16,450, and by 2010-11, 56,976 undergraduates enrolled in the U.S. China exports more of its students to the U.S. than to any other country. They are already reaping the benefits educationally and economically.

    In February 2011, in a meeting with Silicon Valley's biggest entrepreneurs, President Barack Obama asked Steve Jobs of Apple what it would take to make iPhones in the U.S. rather than China. Jobs replied that those jobs aren't coming back. The New York Times reported it this way: "Apple executives believe the vast scale of overseas factories as well as the flexibility, diligence and industrial skills of foreign workers have so outpaced their American counterparts that "Made in the U.S.A." is no longer a viable option for most Apple products."

    The Chinese realize the potential of American universities when engaged properly.

    When a student approaches the university with a specific degree focus, applies it with diligence and finances it soundly, understanding the commitment he or she is making, the American university system is still the best in the world. American students must begin approaching their higher education just as smartly and seriously, or our academies will be filled with aspiring and inquiring minds from elsewhere.

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
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    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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    until you’ll
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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