Chinese students in US need greater support

Published 17/05/2018

A co-founder of international student organisation and agency WholeRen Group has called for greater support systems to be offered to Chinese students studying in the US to help them succeed in the country’s academic system.

According to WholeRen chief learning officer Andrew Cheng, the current generation of Chinese students are typically an only child and the culture and language shock they experience when moving to the US academic can be difficult for them to overcome.

“They are rich, they have the resources, so a lot of the time they don’t think about their future”

“There are families that have a lot of money but the kids are not well guided… The students get overpolished, overpackaged by their agent in China,”  Cheng told The PIE News.

“They are rich, they have the resources, so a lot of the time they don’t think about their future.”

Cheng explained that many Chinese students find it impossible fit into the rigorous academic level at their new school “because everything was done for them” at home in China.

He said that some students even hire test takers to take their TOEFL and SAT.

“Once they come [to the US] they cannot stay in that level,” he explained.

“It’s a very big shock for the student… schools tell them we have this and that, and by the way, you cannot plagiarise – it just doesn’t click.”

Cheng said he believes US universities need to do more to support international students.

He said his company has been advocating that many Chinese students and their families are willing to pay extra for add-on services such as tutoring, activity arrangements, job advising and graduate school counselling.

“Chinese students are a very special group in the international students, many schools have over 50% of the international student population from China.

“If schools don’t actively support them it will hurt the level of success of the Chinese students in the school,” Cheng continued.

“International education does not end at recruitment. It should really be benchmarked by how successful the students and alumni are.”

Read the full interview with Andrew Cheng here

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