BEIJING, Jan. 18 -- The number of students expected
to take part in tomorrow's national postgraduate entrance examination has
dropped for the first time in a decade.
The Ministry of Education (MOE) said yesterday that 1.2 million people have registered for the exam this year, down 6 percent on last year.
Education experts have attributed the decline to the
falling number of employment opportunities for fresh graduates with master's
degrees or doctorates.
"Social values have changed now as employers do not
focus solely on educational qualifications but on real ability," Mao Zuhuan, a
professor from the Beijing University of Science and Technology, said.
Jiang Baojin, CEO of a private company in Nanjing,
Jiangsu province, said his company employs people who can provide the most
benefits for the least expense.
"If an undergraduate and a graduate have similar
experience we will choose the undergraduate to save money," Jiang said.
In addition, some colleges and universities have
introduced a pilot reform that removes free education for some postgraduates.
Sichuan University, on the other hand, has said it
will implement a scholarship scheme for postgraduate studies this year.
MOE spokesman Wang Xuming said people have previously
"taken for granted" the idea that postgraduate students have brighter employment
prospects than others.
"Large numbers of undergraduates chose postgraduate
study to delay entering the fierce job market," he said.
However, many employers are now looking for people
with more practical experience, he said.
Some universities have strengthened personal
development counseling and employment guidance in recent years, asking students
to learn more work-related skills before choosing further education.
Signs of a cooling down of attendance for the
postgraduate entrance exam began to emerge last year when 1.28 million people
registered, just 7,000 more than in 2006.
Students also now have more opportunities to continue
their education abroad.
Du Ran, a third-year undergraduate studying at the
Communication University of China, said: "The postgraduate entrance exam is too
difficult and the competition is too fierce.
"So I am preparing to go to Hong Kong to study for my
master's degree."
(Source: China Daily)