BEIJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- About 40 percent of the
Chinese undergraduates who had scored the highest marks at college entrance
examinations chose to study abroad, according to a latest survey.
Most of them settled down in foreign countries after
they finished studies there, said the survey tracking 130 top winners at college
entrance exams from 1977 to 1998.
Dubbed as "zhuangyuan", which literally referred to
the top contestants in the imperial examinations in feudal China, these students
were once lauded by the media as national heroes and as examples for their
younger peers.
The survey, released by the website of the China
Alumni Association, found it worrying that many of the top-notch students would
not stay in China for advanced studies despite the country's rapid development
in the past decades.
Cai Yanhou, a professor with the Central South
University based in Changsha, capital of central China's Hunan Province, said
the government should find better ways to attract the talented students to stay.
Statistics from the UNESCO show that Chinese students
have made up 14 percent of the global international students, ranking the top in
the world. The United States, Britain and Japan are their most popular
destinations for higher education.
Handsome scholarships, better employment prospects
and more opportunities to pursue further studies in other countries are the main
attractive factors of foreign universities, experts say.
But Cai Yanhou, also leader of the survey team, also
pointed out that "top in exams" did not equal to "top in career", as the survey
found none of the top winners at college entrance exams later turned to be
China's top experts or academicians.
The entrance exam is just one of the numerous exams a
person will go through in his life and can't foretell his future achievements in
other aspects, said Wang Xuming, spokesman of the Ministry of Education while
criticizing the media's hype on these "zhuangyuans".
Some of them were just more adaptable to the testing
system of examination-oriented education than their peers, experts say.
The media flood their pages with their "success"
stories to gain a wider readership, high schools proudly promote these ex-pupils
to attract more new students and universities want to show their superior status
by recruiting these laureates, they say.
Wang Xuming hoped that future reforms would discard
the score-oriented method so that students can be judged from various aspects
and education can develop in a more comprehensive way.