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NEWS ARCHIVE - 2006
Dina Habib Powell, Assistant Secretary of State
U.S. Higher Education Delegation to Asia
Remarks at Beijing Normal University
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Beijing, China
November 16, 2006
As prepared for delivery.
Good afternoon. I am so honored to be here at Beijing Normal University.
And thank you Vice Minister Zhang, President Zhong, and Chairwoman
Liu for your hospitality. We are so pleased to have this opportunity
to engage your students in a sharing of ideas about the value
of international student exchange. I am also honored to be sharing
this stage with President Shirley Jackson of Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute. Dr. Jackson eloquently described the great potential
available to China and the United States through international
educational exchange and cooperation.
As she said, this is an historic moment – it is the first
time Americans have ever organized a joint delegation of cabinet-level
U.S. government officials and university and college presidents
to travel overseas to promote U.S. higher education.
Our mission is two-fold: first, we want to bring the message
that Chinese students are welcome in the United States; second,
we want to encourage more American students to study in China.
Our international exchange relationship with China is one of
our most important. It dates back nearly 60 years, when the US
and China initiated the world’s first Fulbright exchange.
Through the years, the numbers and kinds of educational exchanges
between our two countries have flourished, as has the Fulbright
program.
We planned this visit to coincide with International Education
Week, celebrated in many countries around the world. It provides
the perfect moment to join with our partners. Together, we reflect
on the important role that international educational exchange
plays in the development of the next generation of world leaders,
indeed the future of the world.
A highlight of International Education Week is the publication
of the annual survey of international students in the U.S., called
Open Doors. The newest edition, released on Monday, demonstrates
that China continues to be one of the leading countries sending
students to the United States, reaching a high of more than 63,500
students last year. And all of us in America are pleased that
there is a 35 percent increase in the number of U.S. students
studying in China, more than 6,000 last year. We want to grow
that number. And through President Bush’s new National Security
Language Initiative, we are opening more opportunities for Americans
to improve their knowledge of Chinese language and culture. And
China is providing the teachers, who are currently in the United
States through the National Security Language Initiative program,
to help educate American students in the language and culture
of this great nation.
To support the need for an increased flow of two-way exchange,
the State Department issued a record number of student visas in
our Embassies around the world this past year. The total number
of student and exchange visas reached an all-time high of 591,000
during 2006. In China, we’ve recorded very substantial increases
and the number of student visas increased thirty-seven percent
over last year.
This is a result of our strategic plan – it is no accident.
President Bush is committed to welcoming international students
to the United States. He recognizes that mutual understanding
between the people of the United States and people of other countries
developed through international exchange programs is vital.
Under the leadership of Secretary of State Rice and Homeland Security
Secretary Chertoff, we have made it a priority to streamline our
visa processes to increase the number of visitors to the United
States, particularly students. In fact, more than ninety-seven
percent of student visas are issued to qualified applicants in
a matter of days.
Balancing security and openness is critical for our two-way exchange.
As Secretary Rice recently stated, our bilateral relationship
with China is one of critical importance as we prepare our citizens
for the global challenges and opportunities of this century.
I can think of no better spokesperson to lead our first US Higher
Education Delegation than Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings.
She is a committed advocate for quality educational opportunities
for US students and values their exploration of other societies
and cultures to make them globally competitive in an ever-flattening
world.
And now, ladies and gentlemen, I would like to introduce the
first-ever mother of school aged children to serve as Secretary
of Education, Margaret Spellings.
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