Stanford center opens in Beijing
Updated: 2012-03-22 07:15
By Luo Wangshu (China Daily)
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"Increasingly, our students want to know and understand more about China, and our researchers want to be working with their colleagues from China to solve the challenges in the world."
The president also mentioned that Peking University has begun discussions about Stanford building a center on Stanford campus, but he said he has no details to release because the talks have just started.
"I'm glad that we have a home here now," said Scott Rozelle, a Stanford University professor and leader of the Rural Education Action Project, an organization that evaluates and advises on education, health and nutrition policies in China.
Matthew Boswell, who works with Rozelle, told China Daily that they used to work at the Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. "When the offices were in short supply, we would have to grab a coffee for a conference," he said. "But now we have our own place, and no longer need to go to a cafe."
Jim Plummer, dean of the Stanford School of Engineering, told China Daily that the center will serve mostly as a hub for Stanford students coming to China, because many more Chinese students have already studied at Stanford. "We want to strike a balance," he said.
Presently there are more than 1,000 Chinese students studying at Stanford. For more than 10 years, the university has enrolled more students from China than any other country out of the US, according to Hennessy.
"As a new platform for Peking University and Stanford to further students exchanges, scholars' visits and other cooperation, the center will provide an opportunity for Peking University and other Chinese universities to share resources and deepen cooperation with Stanford University, and ultimately reach a win-win situation," said Peking University President Zhou Qifeng at the opening ceremony.
Gary Locke, the US ambassador to China, voiced his thanks to Stanford for encouraging American students to study in China, to achieve President Barack Obama's 100,000 Initiative plan, which aims to send 100,000 US students to study in China in next four years.
"I hope the center will go beyond collaboration between Stanford and Peking University but also serve as a tie between Chinese universities and American ones," said Hennessy.
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