Taiwanese schools say
recruitment of Chinese students only benefiting China
By Lin Hsiao-yun and Hu Ching-hui / Staff reporters
Since Taiwan opened its doors to Chinese students, complaints have risen that
China’s Cross-strait Student Recruitment Center has made more money than
Taiwanese schools and travel agencies.
A total of 933 Chinese students were accepted by Taiwanese universities last
year, according to college administrators. School admission fees totaled about
NT$7 million (US$237,000), with the Chinese Cross-strait Student Recruitment
Center taking in NT$2.6 million for providing certified transcripts of records
and other service fees.
To allay concern that allowing Chinese students into Taiwanese universities
might affect educational and job opportunities for local students and graduates,
the Ministry of Education has imposed restrictions on Chinese enrollment, known
as the “three limits, six noes” policy.
Under the policy, acceptance is limited to Chinese students from prestigious
Chinese schools, the number of Chinese students is restricted to 0.1 percent of
total domestic student recruitment and Chinese students are barred from courses
in pharmacy, Chinese and Western medicine, high-tech and national security.
As for the six noes, they refer to no entrance examinations for Chinese
students, ensuring that their enrolment would not impact on local student
recruitment, no scholarships, no off-campus work for Chinese students, and they
cannot join tests for Republic of China professional certifications or civil
servant examinations.
Some universities have expressed dissatisfaction over the Chinese center making
so much money, while the universities themselves have not benefited and had to
cover the recruitment costs themselves.
The universities say they lose thousands of New Taiwan dollars for every Chinese
student who is recruited.
Chang Hong-de (張鴻德), secretary-general of University Entrance Committee for
Mainland Chinese Students, said that 1,700 Chinese students had applied for
university entrance and another 700 for graduate school. The center charged
NT$350 for each university application, NT$1,350 for graduate school and
NT$2,450 for doctorates.
Asked why Taiwanese universities were not able to get any money from student
recruitment, Chang said China’s city and provincial governments take charge of
collecting diplomas and transcript of records, while the Cross-strait Student
Recruitment Center charges a one-time fee of 500,000 yuan (US$79,200).
After negotiations, the committee and the center settled on the figure of NT$2.6
million, or one-third of the total admission fees, Chang said.
With the rest of the funds being spent on the committee’s daily operations, the
committee told the universities that they would not be alloted any money to
cover processing fees for Chinese students, Chang said.
The universities have complained that their budget for recruitment of Chinese
students was in the red because they have to pay out of their own pockets for
professors to review the students’ applications.
Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Kuan Bi-ling (管碧玲) said the issue showed
glaring deficiencies in cross-strait collaboration, adding that Beijing’s ban on
direct recruitment of Chinese students by Taiwanese universities had only
benefited the center.
A large part of the fees go into verifying documents and doing education
background checks, because of fears in Taiwan that some Chinese diplomas might
be fake, Department of Higher Education director Ho Cho-fei (何卓飛) said.
If the universities are unhappy about the admission fees, they will have to
settle the issue with the committee, Ho said.
Chang said that after student recruitment concludes next month, the committee
would welcome any debate regarding raising Chinese students’ admission fees.
However, many academics say that China has its own limits and standards on what
scores students need to apply for studies in Taiwan.
As Chinese students need only to achieve the secondary score line of the
National Higher Education Entrance Examination, it appears that China does not
want its better students to go to Taiwan for studies, some academics said,
adding that recruitment rates for Chinese students this year do not look
promising.
Translated by Jake Chung, Staff writer
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