BEIJING, Dec. 7 (Xinhua) -- More than 80 percent of
university students in China want to study abroad, according to a new online
survey.
The survey, conducted by the China Youth Daily and
involving 2,400 university students, revealed that 42 percent of respondents
believe an overseas education will be beneficial to their future career
development.
It also showed 66 percent felt students with an
education background overseas were more competitive than graduates from domestic
universities when it came to job hunting.
"The CEOs of Nasdaq-listed Baidu and Sohu both
received an overseas education," said He He, a student at Sichuan University,
adding that the variety of majors offered by universities abroad was a
significant factor.
Liang Ke, a senior student at Tsinghua Journalism
School, plans to study social work via an AIDS education internship in India,
explaining that universities at home rarely offer these kind of courses.
Mao Tingting, who works for an agency that arranges
overseas study for Chinese students, said students were attracted by the
handsome scholarships on offer and better job prospects.
China's present five to ten percent growth in
university enrolment makes graduates' job prospects gloomier, Mao added.
The survey also showed the favorite destinations for
overseas study were the United States, Britain, France, Australia and Canada.
Statistics from the Ministry of Education showed that
in 2006 more than 130,000 Chinese went abroad for further study.
To cope with the trend, China's National Education
Examinations Authority recently announced it would offer 100,000 online TOEFL
(Test of English as a Foreign Language) seats in 2008 to residents of the
Chinese mainland, up 80 percent on the figure in 2007.