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Meeting the Expectations of our Chinese Students Tim Cooper, International Student Support Officer Student Panel: Wenhui Wu, Timothy Wong, Siyang Sun, Jiayang Wang, Sheng Zhang. International Student Survey 2005 (TUOS: externally conducted).
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Meeting the Expectations of our Chinese Students Tim Cooper, International Student Support Officer Student Panel: Wenhui Wu, Timothy Wong, Siyang Sun, Jiayang Wang, Sheng Zhang
International Student Survey 2005 (TUOS: externally conducted)
China 721 Malaysia 538 Greece 189 Germany 149
“to understand more about these students with a viewto better understanding their needs”
Highlighted: • Integration • Greater emphasis on academic aspects of university experience • Language skills
Recommendations: • Arrivals/orientation • Accommodation • Finance • Language skills
Numbers • Recruitments markets • PBS
2011-12 • Overseas students 20% of student body • China 2,124 • Malaysia 424 • India 392 • Nigeria 243
Main recruitment areas of Chinese students: • Business/Management/Economics • Engineering • Course choice based on definite career aims • And driven by needs of fast-growing economy
Informal TUOS survey of Chinese students (2009): • Key messages not always getting through • Need to improve ways University communicates • with Chinese students
Chinese students can experience real difficulties in adjusting both to UK educational system and culture: • Expect to be told what to learn, what to read and what is ‘the correct answer’ • Difficulties integrating with ‘general student life’ • Home students ‘doing their own thing’ • “Pub” and “group” culture • Prolonged feelings of ‘being a visitor’ • Adoption of ‘split culture’ • “I’ve got two sets of values, one is for here and one is for China. I think they are just natural” • 57% “happy” in the UK66% “happy” back in China
Chinese Students Project (TUOS 2012-13) • Review of existing information on University services and support for international students in general and Chinese students in particular • Focus groups on awareness levels of available information, perceived usefulness, needs and expectations • Production of in-house videos • Where to go for information • Access to Healthcare services
[Video clip: “Where to go for Information”] http://youtu.be/P_qshyM1EwY
Main findings of research/focus group component: • Need for consistent and logical layout of web pages • Less text-heavy • Universal language • Suggestion that “official” University emails widely ignored • Preference for information from friends rather than official outlets • Significance of social networking sites such as Weibo and CSSA • Confidentiality policies not always fully understood
Screenshot of message from Chinese Students Project Worker on Weibo
Screenshot of message from Chinese Students Project Worker on Chinese Students and Scholars Association (CSSA) website
Learning and Teaching • 2011 study by Chinese /American academics • Very different learning styles: • Focus on acquiring knowledge • Students not actively encouraged to reflect, think independently or offer opinion • Some reluctance to participate in class discussion • Heavily test-based, leading to strong focus on grades • Plagiarism issue needs to be carefully explained at outset
Ongoing Chinese Student project 2012-13 • Recognize significance of sites such as Weibo and investigate how all areas of the University can engage with them more effectively • This would be the first home of Chinese language videos • Extend range of videos to include all areas of support services • e.g. Counselling Service
Video clip: interview between Chinese Students Project Worker and Student Counsellor http://youtu.be/VaTBkCxsw2s
Digital storying • reflect real student experience • move away from “group” perception
Video clip from “Youzi” (Chinese Students Storying Project, School of English, TUOS) http://www.youziproject.com/