TRANSNATIONAL EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT IN CHINA: A REVIEW
MIN TANG *
Department of Foreign Languages, Taizhou University, Taizhou, Jiangsu Province, 225300, China.
NING TANG
Department of Psychology, Sociology and Politics, Sheffield Hallam University, Collegiate Crescent Campus, Sheffield S10 2BQ, UK.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
The emergence of China as one of the biggest host countries of TNE in the past decades has been indispensable to the progressive TNE policies in China. This paper systematically reviews Chinese TNE policy changes and conceptually analyses six distinctive phases of TNE policy development. It suggests a changing pattern of cautious TNE relationship with western countries to the enthusiastic establishment of TNE institutions and programs across China, followed by tightened TNE review and targeted development of TNE disciplines and models, leading to a guided TNE promotion with the Belt and Road countries in recent years and temporary expansion of TNE recruitments in the current pandemic China. The paper argues that TNE policy changes always keep pace with the strategic development of China as evidenced in the current focus of a dual-way TNE of ‘draw-in’ and ‘going-out’.
Keywords: Transnational education, policy impact, China