Book Chapters
Rethinking the notion of Hong Kong as a regional education hub: Toward a cosmopolitan approach to internationalization of higher education
- Rethinking the notion of Hong Kong as a regional education hub: Toward a cosmopolitan approach to internationalization of higher education
- Internationalization of higher education: The case of Hong Kong
- Singapore
- Springer
- 2016
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- Hong Kong has signaled its intention to develop itself as a regional education hub for a decade. However, the policy is being criticized because Hong Kong has neither diversified its student population ethnically and culturally nor expanded its share in the global higher education market. This chapter explores the significance of the education hub concept in the development of higher education in Hong Kong. It begins with a brief examination of the existing approach to the concept of education hub and internationalization of higher education. It then looks into the main initiatives made by the Hong Kong government to implement its education hub strategy. This is followed by a critical examination of the effects of the hub strategy with a focus on the tensions between Hong Kong and mainland China. It also explores the special status of Hong Kong’s higher education sector in China under the “one country, two systems” constitutional framework. The chapter concludes by arguing that a capitalist and instrumentalist interpretation of internationalization of higher education is not a sufficient condition to underpin an effective education hub notion. Instead, it sees cosmopolitanism as a better ideological rationale for the development of internationalization of higher education in the city.[Copyright © 2016 Springer Science+Business Media Singapore.]
-
- English
- Book Chapters
-
- 9789812876676
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/78fc193b
- 2016-01-18
Recent Book Chapters
Architecture of health: Hygiene and schooling in Hong Kong, 1901–1941Book Chapters
Differences in the relationships between executive functions, reading engagement, and reading comprehension between primary students from Grade 3 and Grade 5Book Chapters
Life and moral education and Chinese language education: Trends and prospects in the Greater China RegionBook Chapters
Transprofessional identity of L1 Chinese language teachers in changing multilingual contextsBook Chapters
A review of the development of language teaching and learning in Hong Kong in the past 50 yearsBook Chapters
Perceptions of motivational strategies among pre-service Chinese language teachersBook Chapters
Innovative practices of teaching classical Chinese vocabulary: From etymology to semantic systemBook Chapters
Computational thinking education in Hong KongBook Chapters