A couple of
years ago, the Washington Post did a front-page story on the University I
worked for. I was interviewed for my successful recruiting of top Chinese
students into its academic community. I was thrilled that these wonderful
students were then profiled and pictured as being an integral part of our
university. I know our founder would have been proud. It was the first time a story that was not
negative had graced the front page of the Post on anything to do with students.
I felt happy and very self-satisfied. I knew I had done something good.
Then I read
the article on line. There were more pictures of our students smiling, cooking,
and making goofy faces. I had talked to the photographer and he wanted to
portray these super geniuses not as nerds looking through books or at a
computer screen. Those were outdated clichés. Instead, after taking with them,
he decided to go to one of their dinners. The photos were an accurate portrayal
of the playful, well-rounded students they were and still are. Once again, I thought
"how great": the cultural stereotypes that so often exist among Americans
toward Asians in general had been given proof positive that they were not
accurate. Now I felt a great thing had been done and wanted to thank the Post
for profiling these kids.
But then I
read the reader comments. I was shocked. Then angry, and then sad. Not quite the
seven stages of grief because frankly I still have not gotten over what I read
then and what I hear when people talk at parties or write in books some of what
was said on-line. A great many of the comments focused on why a great
university would give away spaces to potential spies and communists. Really. Moreover,
this was the Washington Post for goodness sake, the liberal media elite. Yet,
comment after comment ripped into our policy and students. They accused them of
being stooges for their government. They accused them of being communist spies
here to steal our secrets. In fact, these students know a great deal about what
happens in China. They are not blithely ignorant.
When people hear that people in China do not have access to Facebook and some other sites what they do not realize is that this is, as so much in China when it comes to government intervention, only partly true. Anyone who studies in the US gets an IP address that permits access to Facebook and Google and anything else. Western hotels, which offer free wireless in the lobbies, can be open access too. The Chinese government knows this and frankly, they don’t care. It’s not the smart people they are worried about. It is the poor and uneducated who are kept in the dark and this is, for their government, for very good reasons.
While
readers on the Post were accusing these students of being spies, they probably did
not pay much attention to the significance, this summer, of the Chinese Party’s removal
of Bo Xilei. The charismatic leader of cites and a province was gaining a great
following among the poor and calling for a return to Maoist ideals. He was
charged with crimes, as was his wife; his son was taken to task in both the US
and Chinese press for living lavishly. In other words, he was purged. Well,
lots of reasons, but the one Chinese students talk to me about is that he was moving
in a direction the party does not want to follow. His call for a return of what
we in the west would call Maoist values is exactly what the leaders do not
want. For their economic success to continue they need the poor to be poor and quiescent.
The need cheap labor and they don’t need unrest from 800,000,000 people. In short,
he was purged for being too communist. Now that is textbook defining irony
given what some people in the US think the Chinese government is planning here
in the US.
I mention
this simply to correct yet another view that the Chinese students, while are hardworking,
are unaware of what is going on in their own country, and not be trusted.
I think they
are wrong. And here is why; what I am going to do is provide some numbers.
Without data, everything else is just opinion. I have written a version of this
quote a number of times on this and other sites. Here are some worth noting. (The
figures I am posting are from last year as this year’s final numbers do not
come out until October.)
Here is a
brief lesson in math. This past year 77% of the students who submitted 800 score
(the highest possible score) on the physics SAT subject test were from china.
This is stunning in and of itself. However, when you take into consideration
that our Chinese applicant pool comprises just 6% of our applicants then you
know that the Chinese students are over-represented at the top by several
orders of magnitude.
Moreover,
it is not just physics. Average SAT 2 Scores for students from China: physics:
791/800, Chemistry 787/80 on Chemistry. The median SAT 2 math score for
entering students from China (over 100 students): 800. Yes, 800. Nowhere in the
history of my university has any subgroup ever done anything remotely like
this. However, scores are just one measure. Graduation ceremonies recognize outstanding
achievement. Were high school or university, Asian student again and outperform
Non-Asians.
Here is
where I start to shake my head in disappointment at our current government policy.
There very students, the best and the brightest in the entire US, would, for
the most part, love to be able to stay in the US, get great jobs, and
eventually obtain a green card and then ultimately citizenship. And what could be better for this country? To
have the very best students be a part of the innovative leaders who will guide
us out of economic stagnation seems like a recipe for success. Unfortunately,
the US government has a very different take away from all these great students
wanting to be a part of the American Dream. As I have already written in
previous posts, and as the film I am associated with "Will Work for Words",
demonstrates, we are sending the vast, vast majority of these students back to
China. Our tiny number of spaces open each year for work visa assures this. So
instead of having them here spending money, creating jobs as CEOs and entrepreneurs,
we are sending them to China to do the same. Again this is fact not opinion.
The 120 colleges and universities who have written to the leaders of the US
have asked them to revise this policy for the benefit of the country. However, politicians,
these days, side with those readers of the Post who think it is far better to
ship them back to China. And so they are going and taking jobs and money with
them.
If someone can
explain why this is good for the US and for the world economy I hope they will
post here or at least email me so I can stand corrected. As long as there is
data and logical support, I promise I will apologize in public for all the controversial
things I have just said. But at the moment I am feeling optimistic I won’ have
to do this. And also immensely sad that I am correct about this. Contradiction
is built in to human nature.
Moreover, there
are a number of posts forthcoming in which I think I will be able to say the
same thing. Stay tuned. It’s going to get messy.
Note: The photographs
are of Asian students dong literally what they are doing metaphorically
academically in our universities: getting to the top. The last photo is of a
student who as just climbed the 5th of toughest mountains in China.
This represents the future the US seems to want. Send the best and brightest back
to China where they will work hard to rise to the top and create jobs and wealth
there. Some would say good riddance. I would say bad policy. And bad business.
As one president famously said: "The business of America is business.” However,
our policies seem to undercut this statement. It needs to be retired. Let those
young strivers rise elsewhere. We are, perhaps, too old in our thinking to want
to be the shining city on the hill we used to be.





You make good points, Parke. We should be making more room for the best & the brightest to come here & contribute to American business, science & society.
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