As US Universities Decline, Asia Nears Top of the Class
Bill Costello | February 23, 2010
Mainland China has six universities in the world's top 200. (EPA Photo) Related articles
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Since 2004, the world’s top 200 universities have been ranked annually by the Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings. Recently, Asian education systems have been making significant gains on the United States, long considered to have the world’s best education system.
In 2008, the United States had 37 universities in the top 100 and 58 in the top 200. In 2009, that dropped to 32 and 54, respectively; although 12 of the top 16 in the world are still in the United States. Between 2008 and 2009, Japan went from 10 in the top 200 to 11, Hong Kong went from four to five, South Korea went from three to four, and mainland China maintained its position with six.
Having visited nearly half of these Asian universities and seen their extensive expenditure on research facilities, I am not surprised when I read about Asian nations making enormous investments in their universities. Asia is investing to produce massive numbers of innovative people who can contribute significantly to economic growth.
I am surprised, however, when I read about concomitant funding reductions for US universities, particularly public ones. For example, the University of California, long regarded as the nation’s leading public university, recently suffered a $813 million reduction in state financing. Disinvestment is also happening to universities in Michigan, Washington, Arizona, and many other states.
Budgets are being cut from state-supported universities primarily because of budget shortfalls of historic proportions. However, short-sighted state politics like this will lead to long-term consequences. For example, state budget cuts force universities to raise tuition, cap enrollment and cut academic programs. This results in a smaller number of graduates, which in turn results in a shrinking skilled work force.
The United States needs a growing, educated labor pool, not a shrinking one, to continue to compete in the global economy and foreign students have for decades made up an important part of the professional sector.
Currently, the United States has the best universities in the world. They attract the best students from around the globe. After graduating, these non-US students often stay to work, helping to fuel the nation’s innovation and economic growth. Today 55 percent of engineering students with doctorates are foreign born, along with 45 percent of graduate physicists working in the United States.
However, when US universities decline in quality and lose their elite status because of budget cuts, bright students from around the world will seek universities in other nations. The effect of overseas students on the US scientific community is crucial. More than 30 percent of American Nobel Prize winners in medicine and physiology between 1901 and 2005 were foreign born.
The goal of Asian nations is to create world-class universities that surpass US universities. They have “every prospect of success,” argued Yale University president Richard C. Levin in a recent lecture, titled “The Rise of Asia’s Universities.” Levin also stated that rising Asian nations “all recognize the importance of an educated work force as a means to economic growth and the impact of research in driving innovation and competitiveness.”
Though many of Asia’s universities rely heavily on rote learning, which has negative effects on critical thinking and creativity, Asian educators are now better at seeking solutions to such problems.
Speaking at the inaugural Asian Roundtable of Presidents of Universities of Education, Xu Jialu, director of the College of Chinese Language and Culture at Beijing Normal University, said that China needed to produce massive numbers of innovative professionals if it is to continue its robust economic growth. He added, “In Chinese education, the development of a creative mind-set and abilities among students is urgently needed.”
In the current issue of Foreign Policy Magazine, Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Fogel predicts that China’s GDP will reach $123 trillion by 2040 partially because of “the enormous investment China is making in education.” He also predicts that the US share of global GDP will be roughly one-third that of China’s.
Without increased investment, the United States will no longer have the best higher education in the world, will no longer be the innovation leader and will no longer have the largest economy. If the United States wants to keep pace with Asia, it will need to increase, not reduce, university funding. As the American patriot, inventor and philosopher Benjamin Franklin put it, “An investment in knowledge pays the best dividends.”
Asia Sentinel
Bill Costello is a US-based education columnist, blogger, and author of “Awaken Your Birdbrain: Using Creativity to Get What You Want.”
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