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EAST LANSING, Mich.-The Hong Kong-based Sun Wah Education Foundation today
donated $5 million to Michigan State University to fund a joint center
between U.S. and Chinese scholars for the study of effective K-12 schools.
The United States-China Center for Research on Educational Excellence
will team MSU and other professors and Chinese scholars to research and
develop effective models of education that integrate strengths of both
Eastern and Western practices.
"For many years, I have provided financial support in various forms
to schools and universities in China," said Jonathan Choi, president
of the Sun Wah Group and chairman of the Sun Wah Education Foundation.
"However, I have come to realize, to paraphrase an ancient Chinese
saying, that I have been trying to give people fish, instead of trying
to find a way to teach them how to fish.
"In business, when we find a successful model, we try to replicate
it. I hope this center will identify, study, and thus come to understand
effective educational practices in China and the United States through
empirical and theoretical research."
MSU President Peter McPherson hailed the partnership and the foundation's
commitment to students and learning.
"In creating this center, the Sun Wah Education Foundation has made
a wonderful investment in the future of education in both China and the
United States," McPherson said. "We at MSU believe strongly
in engaging in research and development with partners throughout the world.
The new center is a perfect example of that collaborative spirit, and
I expect that what we learn about great schools and teaching through this
partnership will impact the lives of students in both nations."
The center will be headquartered at MSU and directed by Associate Professor
Yong Zhao of the Department of Counseling, Educational Psychology and
Special Education. Zhao said the center will build on the strong international
and research focus at MSU's College of Education. An essential goal of
the center is that research yield effective models that can be implemented
in schools in China, and that inform educational reform efforts in the
United States, he said. "The research will be more systemic in nature
rather than specific to a subject like mathematics or science," Zhao
said. "We want to look at the whole school and what works in terms
of the school ecology, including administration, teachers and teaching,
curriculum, parental and community involvement, etc. "Great schools
are widely recognized for their standards of excellence and for achieving
those standards. We want to know as much as we can about these schools
in China and the United States."
Gilbert Choy, chief executive officer of the Sun Wah Education Foundation,
said work is already underway to establish working relationships with
professors at Beijing Normal University. Once effective models are established
based on research findings, Choy said that the center will pilot test
the models in Chinese schools with the goal of eventually making them
widely available in both countries.
The center will be overseen by a four-member board composed of two representatives
appointed by MSU and two by the Sun Wah Education Foundation. Choi will
serve as the initial chairman of the board.
The Sun Wah Group is a $1.2 billion conglomerate based in Hong Kong with
businesses in seafood and foodstuffs; real estate; financial services;
and infrastructure, technology, and media. The group's activities span
China, Macau, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, Singapore, Canada, Europe, and
the United States.
The Sun Wah Group is the flagship of the Choi family, which has donated
millions to charitable projects. As president of Sun Wah Group and chairman
of its foundation, Jonathan Choi has long had an interest in educational
initiatives. He serves as economic adviser to the president of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences, and also serves on the boards of directors of Fudan
University, Nanjing University, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology,
and Hong Kong Polytechnic University. In addition, he is an adviser to
the Chinese Economic Research Center at Peking University.
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