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Rich Chinese Students Steer Clear Of Western Schools And Universities

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Rich Chinese Students Steer Clear Of Western Schools And Universities

Ollie Williams
May 28, 2020,10:00am EDT

They make up the largest body of international students around the world and this is the time of year when wealthy Chinese students enrol at U.S. and U.K. schools and universities. But now they are having doubts.

The number of Chinese applicants to the U.K.'s Tier 1 visa (a common route for wealthy students to study in the U.K.) dropped 72% in the first three months of this year.

Coronavirus restrictions explain this obvious fall. But, in theory, as lockdown measures relax this demand should pick up again. Only it isn't, say advisers.

"I'm talking to clients in China. One of the things they're waiting on is whether they can come [to the U.K.] in August for their children's education," says Rafael Steinmetz Leffa, a relationship manager at Shard Capital who deals largely with Chinese clients.

Should classes go online, or schools not open, then those children will stay in China, explains Steinmetz Leffa.

Already the University of Cambridge has said it will run all lectures online until summer 2021, and others are likely to follow. Schools in the U.K. are due to open next week for certain age groups and, by September, should be fully up and running. But still Chinese parents are hesitant.

"I think there inevitably will be a short term drop in demand," says Felix Hamilton, head of consultancy in China for Keystone Tutors, a private tutoring company. "The Chinese families I've been speaking to still haven't made a final decision whether to come back in September as they are waiting to see how it plays out here."

"There's definitely concern," says Raffaele Flackett, a director of BE Education, which helps Chinese students find placements at British schools. The U.K. government and its handling of the coronavirus pandemic has been viewed negatively by many in China, he says.

"Even if schools were to all reopen tomorrow and coronavirus were to be eliminated I still think there would be a certain amount of mistrust and its aimed mainly at our government," says Flackett.

The same is true of the U.S. where China makes up the largest volume of international students. The relaxation of lockdown measures across the country is at stark odds to the Chinese government's handling of the crises.

And then there's the President's hostility. "By calling it the 'Chinese virus' it’s no surprise that my students are having to deal with xenophobia," Kristen Brownell, who tutors international students at the Claremont Colleges, wrote in The Guardian.

Michelle Bachelet, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said the virus had "set off a disturbing wave of prejudice against people of Chinese and East Asian ethnicity."

That same xenophobia has been felt by some international students at U.K. and Irish universities according to research from the Open University, Trinity College Dublin and the University of Surrey. "Their experiences are likely to have impact on their attitudes to study in the U.K.," says YingFei Héliot, one of the researchers. "Those who might be thinking of coming to study in the U.K. can be impacted by hearing such lived experience."

However, Sino-British or U.S. relations will be fixed with more interaction with Chinese students in schools and universities, not less. "We need to focus on prevention because when it comes to repair stage of any relationships/links that’s often require much longer time and effort," adds Héliot. "The cost in-between this process is high."

https://www.forbes.com/sites/oliver...estern-schools-and-universities/#3ecc9a1d4011
 
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https://www.voanews.com/student-union/chinese-mother-sentenced-college-admissions-scandal

Chinese Mother Sentenced in College Admissions Scandal
By VOA Student Union
May 19, 2020 07:14 PM


FILE - Xiaoning Sui, center, a Chinese national residing in British Columbia, Canada, leaves federal court in Boston, Feb. 21, 2020, after pleading guilty to paying to get her son into the University of California, Los Angeles, as a fake soccer recruit.

A Chinese woman who lives in Canada was sentenced Tuesday for bribing a fixer to get her son admitted to the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) as a soccer recruit.

Xiaoning Sui, 48, of Surrey, British Columbia, was sentenced to five months' time served during a videoconference hearing before U.S. District Court Judge Douglas P. Woodlock.

She was ordered to pay a fine of $250,000 in addition to forfeiting the $400,000 she paid to admissions counselor William "Rick" Singer of California to gain her son entry to UCLA, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Sui is among dozens of rich and famous parents who are accused of buying their children entrance to some of the best universities in the U.S. The U.S. Department of Justice conducted a multilevel, yearslong investigation they dubbed Operation Varsity Blues.

4B637637-2C63-4B3C-BE2C-912CA4AB5642.jpg

Reports: Millions Paid for Chinese Admissions to US Schools
The family of a Chinese student paid $6.5 million to a consultant to ensure her admission to Stanford University in California in 2017, according to the Los Angeles Times. The family of Yusi "Molly" Zhao, who was admitted to Stanford's sailing program in 2017, paid to get their daughter into the highly selective school, the paper reported.
C25AE0DA-4F57-4FAD-A6A7-4527613FB473.jpg

Prosecutors: College Scam Takes Cheating to Whole New Level
Parents Spend Up to Millions to Boost Student Profiles
Sui was arrested in Spain, Sept. 16, 2019, and detained in prison there until she was extradited to Boston, Massachusetts, for the plea hearing. She pleaded guilty in February to one count of federal programs bribery.

Singer and Sui admitted to agreeing in a phone call in August 2018 that she would pay him $400,000 in exchange for him writing her son's application in a "special way," the Justice Department stated in a release.

Singer told Sui he would pay a UCLA coach in exchange for a letter of intent for Sui's son to play soccer. The letter of intent gained Sui's son admission to UCLA, as well as a scholarship.

Sui wired the $100,000 to a bank account in the U.S. northeast state of Massachusetts in the name of Singer's sham charitable organization, Key Worldwide Foundation (KWF), according to the Justice Department release. Jorge Salcedo, then head coach of men's soccer at UCLA, designated Sui's son as a recruited soccer player, which also resulted in his receipt of a scholarship.

Salcedo agreed to plead guilty but has not had a hearing. Singer has pleaded guilty and cooperated with authorities.


FILE - Actress Lori Loughlin departs federal court in Boston after a hearing in a nationwide college admissions bribery scandal, Aug. 27, 2019.
Earlier in May, a federal judge refused to dismiss charges against actress Lori Loughlin, her fashion designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli, and other prominent parents accused of cheating the college admissions process, the Associated Press reported.

The judge sided with prosecutors who denied that investigators had fabricated evidence. Defense attorneys had urged the judge to throw out the indictment over allegations of misconduct by FBI agents. Loughlin and Giannulli are scheduled to go to trial in October on charges that they paid $500,000 to get their daughters into the University of Southern California as crew recruits even though neither girl was a rower.

Last year, actress Felicity Huffman pleaded guilty in federal court to paying an admissions consultant $15,000 to have a proctor correct her older daughter's answers on the college admissions exam, known as the Scholastic Aptitude Test, or SAT. Huffman served 11 days of a two-week sentence for her role in the scam.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.




it's interesting how they are willing to cheat and lie to get into western university in the first place.


Either way, I hope they stop coming. Prices will go down for the locals once that happens.
 
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Well at least they don't have fake degrees and certificates issued from so called "top indian Institutions". Every street dick and harry has one of these fake degrees in india. :lol:
 
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US gov is talking of getting rid of OPT. That's going to be the end of Chinese students coming to the US.
 
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