An increasing number of bright young
Tibetans are working hard to seek higher education as the
autonomous region's economy booms and local Tibetans' living
standards improve, according to a Xinhua
report on July 30.
Soinam Yanggyi,
who completed her college education last year, is preparing
to go to the United States for advanced studies at the
University of California at Berkeley this August.
"My study at the U.S. will be
at my own expense, which will be no small sum, but my mother
told me to learn more at my age and promised to help me out
even by borrowing money," said Soinam Yanggyi.
Soinam Yanggyi's family has a
higher-than-average income in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet
Autonomous Region.
Dawa, along with
nine other students from Tibet University and Tibetan
Medicine College, who have just obtained their master's
degrees, are the first group of postgraduate students
trained by colleges of higher learning based in
Tibet.
"Study fill me with joy
and I plan to work for a doctorate if there is a chance to
do so," said 36-year-old Dawa. "Because of my
studies, I choose not to get married early. After obtaining
my master's degree this year, I made up mind to get married
soon."
Ma Guangyao, deputy
head of the Tibet Education Science Institute, said the fact
that young Tibetans love to pursue and value all the more
higher education nowadays was closely related to the demand
of social development in Tibet and increasing
international exchanges.
In the 1980s, many young Tibetans preferred
studying at secondary technical schools and to get jobs at
their earlier age, though the regional government issued a
set of special policies to encourage them to attend colleges
or universities and receive
higher education,
said Ma.
"Tibet is now
engulfed by an upsurge of education as the demand for skills
of higher education rises sharply," said Ma.
Lhaba, a third grader with Tibet
University, dedicated every minute of his time to study on
campus instead of taking a summer vacation. He hopes to
qualify for postgraduate studies.
"There are more chances for a master's degree and I
want to do postgraduate courses in Tibetan studies,"
said Lhaba. At Tibet University, there are now three centers
conferring masters degrees.
Many
young Tibetans are longing to do postgraduate studies in
institutions of higher learning based in the China's
interior areas because of the limitations placed on
specialties and number of students working for masters
degrees within Tibet.
In past
years, Tibet signed agreements with interior colleges and
universities in training postgraduate students on
cooperative terms. There are now 94 Tibetans working for
masters degrees at the People's University of China, 18 at
Tianjin University and another 20 at Sichuan
University.
Self-study is another
approach to chance for higher education.
Degyi, of the Land Resources Bureau of Tibet, qualified for
postgraduate studies at the People's University of China in
2000, but had to quit half a year later on health grounds.
Since her return to Tibet, she has not slackened to the
least her efforts
and now has three senior
academic titles in economics, accounting and statistics.
"I have been fully
preparing for getting myself qualified for a master of
business administration (MBA) course," said
Degyi.
A total of 86 Tibetans have
acquired MBAs or certificates of MBA studies from training
centers jointly operated in Tibet by the Tibetan Regional
Commission of Economy and Trade, Sichuan University, and
Sichuan Business Administration College.
Statistics show that the number of Tibetans with
higher education has been growing at an alarming speed in
the past 11 years.
To date, 33,000
people in Tibet have received a college education,
accounting for 1.3 percent of the local population, far
higher than the national average.