Higher Education
By the end of 2005, China had 2,273 institutions of higher learning with
over 21 million students. Postgraduate education is growing fast, with
979,000 full-time postgraduate students in 2005, a 20 percent increase on
the 2001 figure. The gross enrollment rate of 21 percent in higher education
indicates that China has entered the stage of popular education. The UNESCO
world higher education report of June 2003 pointed out that the student
population of China's schools of higher learning had doubled in a very short
period, and was the world's largest.
The higher education system has been improved in recent reforms. Many
industrial polytechnic and specialized colleges have been established,
strengthening some incomplete subjects and establishing new specialties,
e.g., automation, atomic energy, energy resources, oceanography, nuclear
physics, computer science, polymer chemistry, polymer physics,
radiochemistry, physical chemistry and biophysics. A project for creating
100 world-class universities began in 1993, which has merged 708 schools of
higher learning into 302 universities. This process has produced
far-reaching reform of higher education management, optimizing educational
resource allocation, and further improving teaching quality and school
standards. More than 30 universities have received help from a special state
fund to support their attainment of world elite class.
Between 1999 and 2003, enrollment in higher education increased from 1.6
million to 3.82 million. In 2005, the total enrollment in ordinary schools
of higher learning and vocational schools was 4.75 million, 280,000 more
than the previous year. Schools of higher learning and research institutes
enrolled 370,000 postgraduate students, 44,000 more than the previous year.
The contribution made by scientific research in the higher education
sector to China's economic construction and social development is becoming
ever more evident. By strengthening cooperation between their production,
teaching and research, schools of higher learning are speeding up the
transformation of research results into products, giving rise to many new
and hi-tech enterprises and important innovations. Forty-three national
university sci-tech parks have been approved or started, some of which have
become important bases for turning research into products.