On the playground of a vocational college in southwest China's
Yunnan Province, a group of Laotians are happily playing sepak
takraw, a popular ball game in Southeast Asian countries.
Center of attention is a youthful figure who has come up with
the Chinese name of Dongling Yang.
Yang, 23, has been in China for six years, majoring in
international trade with the Xishuangbanna Vocational School after
having finished his three-year senior middle course in the Dai
Autonomous Prefecture of Xishuangbanna in southern Yunnan.
Yang is just one of the 103 Laotian students who are now
studying at the Xishuangbanna Vocational School.
Laos is a member of Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) which comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos,
Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam. Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in South China shares a
border with Vietnam, while Yunnan shares its border with Laos,
Vietnam and Myanmar.
Yunnan and Guangxi have been making good use of their geographic
advantage of sharing borders with members of the ASEAN and have
made progress in educational cooperation and exchange with these
countries, especially in higher education, in recent years.
Yunnan College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, for instance,
enrolled more than 100 Thai students last year, while 6,000
students from Vietnam have received long-term and short-term
training courses at Yunnan Normal University and Guangxi Normal
University.
Yu Yizhong, head of the educational affairs bureau of Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region, said, "In the process of building a
Sino-ASEAN Free Trade Zone there is an urgent need to foster
international talents for China and ASEAN members and higher
education acts as a bridge."
In addition to Chinese language and traditional Chinese
medicine, students from ASEAN study at Chinese universities of
higher learning major in subjects such as science and technology,
ecology, economy, law, tourism, medical sciences and business
administration, according to Zhang Shaohong, deputy chief with
thesection for foreign cooperation and exchange of Yunnan
Provincial Educational Affairs Bureau.
Dongling Yang, the Laotian youth who is now chairman of the
Laotian Students' Union with the Xishuangbanna Vocational School,
cited the fair treatment that students from ASEAN have received
asone of the main reasons for a surge in the number of ASEAN
students studying in Chinese colleges of higher learning.
"Laotian students are treated equally to other Chinese students-
we pay the same tuition fees as the Chinese and can also be granted
scholarships if we outperform others in our studies," saidYang.
According to Yang, the vocational school where he studies has
assigned teaching staff to provide counseling service for the
Laotian students on campus.
"In my home country, talents with Chinese language skills and
knowledge in international trade are sure to be in great demand.
Iam confident my experience of studying in China will help me
fulfill my dream," said the Laotian student leader.
(Xinhua News Agency March 25, 2006)