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FIU has signed an agreement with the Tianjin
University of Commerce to run a hospitality management school in China that would mirror
its top-ranked Miami program.
Joseph West, dean of the School of Hospitality
and Tourism Management, explained that officials
of the Tianjin University of Commerce
recognized the economic importance of developing
a full-fledged hospitality program and
approached FIU with the idea of a partnership.
Now that the agreement is signed, FIU and
TUC will begin recruiting and training the faculty,
while the new campus facilities are built.
“A group of business professors from China
will earn their master’s in Hospitality
Management at FIU over the next two years
and will then be hired as FIU faculty to teach
at TUC starting in the fall of 2006,” said
Dean West. The school will have approximately
1,000 students.
The agreement was signed at FIU in front of
a delegation of Chinese officials, including
Chen Jian, undersecretary general for the
General Assembly to the United Nations; Liu
Yi, minister counselor for the Chinese
Embassy in Washington D.C.; Hu Yeshun,
the consul general in Houston; and Wang
Shu Zu, vice chairman of the Standing
Committee of Tianjin People’s Congress.
“I am fully confident that the cooperation
between these two strong institutions will
work very well in the widening of cooperation
between China and the United States in the
important areas of education and human
exchange,” said Undersecretary General Chen.
Wang expressed similar optimism with regard
to the doors this agreement opens: “This cooperation
is more than just the University of
Tianjin and FIU, it is between the city of
Tianjin and the state of Florida and a start-up
point between China and the United States."
For FIU the agreement represents the largest
foreign program the University has been
involved in, including the Hospitality programs
that have been operated in Jamaica
and Switzerland. The Tianjin campus will
also be able to host exchange students and
faculty from FIU.
“This opens up the classroom to a whole
new set of experiences for students here and
there,” said Vice Provost for Academic
Affairs Thomas Breslin.
Breslin noted that the timing for the project is
particularly good because China is on the
verge of a tourism boom.
A report issued recently by the World Travel
and Tourism Council, a private organization
that represents hotel and travel companies,
predicts the number of tourists and business
travelers visiting China will grow 22 percent
a year beginning next year through 2013.
“We are going to be the leaders in training
thousands of professionals to fill the jobs that
will be created by this new phenomenon,”
said Dean West. |