51勛圖

Poor English skills hold back Chinese students in UK universities

One in five Chinese learners say all of their friends are drawn from their home country

Published on
December 12, 2024
Last updated
December 12, 2024
Source: iStock/hxdbzxy

Universities must reform their admission requirements and provide better language support todeal with the large numbers ofChinese students arriving in theUK with relatively poor English skills, areport says.

The , published bythe Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) and consultancy Uoffer 51勛圖, also finds that ethnic clustering insome institutions high concentrations oflearners from the same background is aparticular problem for students from China.

As a result of the slowdown of Chinas economy, the countrys growing emphasis on practical skills over academia, and Beijings rhetoric around overseas study, the number of applicants to the UK may drop sharply, the paper warns, leaving ahole that other countries donotfill.

Despite concerns around the UKs over-reliance on Chinese students, efforts to ease the acute challenges ofintegration faced byChinese students should be ramped up rather than reduced, itadds.

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Figures show that English language proficiency issignificantly lower among students from China than those from other developing economies such as India and Malaysia, and some warn that exams meant to assess English skills may not give a true picture ofChinese students capabilities.

The intensive tutoring and rote-learning style of education in classrooms means that Chinese students can pass International English Language Testing System (IELTS) exams yet still lack fluency and confidence in communication, particularly in spoken English, when they arrive in the UK, the paper says.

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Surveys of Chinese postgraduates in the UK conducted for the report found that about one in three self-assessed their own English language levels as being below the official thresholds required by universities.

Along with language challenges, Hepi also found that Chinese students integration was hampered by their uneven distribution across UK institutions, with 20per cent of the total cohort concentrated in just three highly ranked institutions: UCL and the universities of Glasgow and Manchester.

Data in the report shows that 21per cent of Chinese students surveyed had friends exclusively from their own country, and a further 11per cent had few British friends.

A key driver behind this, the paper says, is limited accommodation options and information access, which often leads to Chinese-only households, something that survey respondents would like help addressing.

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How to support students with English as a second language in higher education


According to the research, Chinese students also find it more difficult than other nationalities to find employment after graduation, which is another area of concern for them.

Author Pippa Ebel, a researcher and expert on China, writes that some of the students have concluded that UK institutions see them only as a revenue stream.

Unfortunately, all too often Chinese students feel the relationship between them and their host university is transactional, she says. Respondents lamented the lack of effort universities make to understand and support their community.

The paper recommends that institutions consider alternatives to the IELTS exam, in particular short video interviews to gauge speaking abilities, as well as emphasising non-academic competencies in the application. Once students from China have arrived in the UK, the sector could offer free weekly language and culture classes to help them integrate better.

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The report urges the sector to engage more closely with agents in China to help widen the distribution of students across the UK and to provide more support with accommodation so Chinese students can enjoy more diverse households.

Josh Freeman, Hepis policy manager, said Chinese students, and the high tuition fees they pay, were critical to the long-term economic health of the UK sector.

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That means institutions will have to work harder to attract and keep them. But the sector should not do so at the expense of quality, and rigorous admissions standards on language and academic ability must be maintained, MrFreeman said.

patrick.jack@timeshighereducation.com

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