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1、Hierarchical Structure of Chinese Higher Education SystemAbstract: Higher education system can be divided into two kinds of hierarchy according to mission and reputation. But the hierarchical structure is in conflict with the value of social justice equipollent structure, which should be the value p

2、ursuit of public management. Though hierarchical structure is unavoidable, the equipollent structure is worthy of pursuit. The pros and cons of the division of sectors and the development of hierarchies are fundamental issues in public policy. The issues involve trade-offs among such values as equit

3、y, competence, and liberty. So, higher education institutes should locate reasonably to enhance their reputation in the respective levels. The government needs to be on the alert on the hierarchical structure of higher education system and maintaining the mobility of hierarchical levels. Keywords: h

4、igher education system; hierarchical structure; social justice; equipollent structure 1. IntroductionThe higher education system is a complicated academic system, and its components are correlative and interactional. At the national level, higher education institutes present a net structure. The lat

5、eral structure is different institutes and the longitudinal structure is a hierarchy of higher education. The condition of higher education system is influenced by political system, financial condition, historical and cultural tradition. So, the higher education system takes on different external pa

6、tterns in every country.2. Higher education system and academic hierarchical structuresThree main missions of higher education are to cultivate talents, do scientific research and serve the society. The activities of higher education are more or less carried out in different institutes. Academic sys

7、tems, in varying degrees, have their activities separated into different types of institutions. These institutions, deliberately or otherwise, are arranged in hierarchies. Along with the increase of activities, the ordinal scale of institutes becomes more obvious and important. It is the hierarchica

8、l structure not the internal structure that largely determines the nature and functions of the academic system.The vertical arrangements of institutions and sectors are of two sorts: high and low placement based on prestige, a hierarchy of sequence; and ranking based on prestige, a hierarchy of stat

9、us, which is often but not always closely related to the first. 1One is from institution of higher education based on mission scope. According to the location in the hierarchy of higher education system, we predict that activities carried out in different institutes vary. The research-based institut

10、es may be on the top, general education may be in lower level, while special education lies in higher level. The other kind of hierarchy of higher education system is based on reputation. Different institutes enjoy a different reputation. Different graduate outcomes also result in different reputati

11、on. The division by mission is more objective without subjective influence. Even though institutes enjoy the same reputation level, their mission levels probably vary. However, division by reputation relates to more subjective value judgment. If there is less liquidity among different mission levels

12、, the hierarchy based on reputation will be more explicit and stiff. The hierarchy usually means the reputation hierarchy based on recognized graduate social value.In different countries, characteristics of academic system hierarchy are different. In brief, there are three types of academic hierarch

13、y. (1) In the first type, several institutions have a monopoly, or near-monopoly, of elite placement that helps to give them much higher prestige than all others. Japan is an outstanding example. A small set of imperial government as instruments of rapid modernization in the late nineteenth and earl

14、y twentieth centuries. Within the cluster of seven institutions, the universities of Tokyo and Kyoto were given, and seized, an even more special place. They became a class unto themselves, to the point where certain high positions in government could be entered only by graduation from certain facul

15、ties. A high degree of institutional hierarchy has been found also in French and Great Britain. In these countries, several institutes monopolize the apex of academic system hierarchy. The advantageous status can obtain much more reputation for these institutes than other institutes. (2) The middle

16、ground of status hierarchy is occupied by such systems as the Canadian and the American, in which pronounced differences exist in the social standing of institutions and sectors, without a few institutions monopolizing elite placement. Institutions and sectors are definitely ranked, but placement to

17、 high office in public as well as private spheres is in institutions have a lock on sponsorship of top offices, political or administrative. (3) The third type is characterized by little status ranking. In Italy, there is virtually no non-university sector that could be second best, and all the univ

18、ersities can send graduates to elite positions in government and the professions. The system of the Federal Republic of Germany is somewhat more hierarchical than the Italian, since its non-university components devoted to technical and teacher training have a lesser standing than the universities.

19、But there are few status differences among the universities, with no one or two places serving in the manner of TokyoKyoto or Oxford-Cambridge, nor, as in the United States, are there universities competing for the status advantages of attracting the best students. These important national cases mak

20、e it clear that institutional sectors tend not to remain merely that, but instead become segments of hierarchies that vary in steepness and rigidity.3. The hierarchy structure of Chinese higher education systemWith reference to the international educational standard classification, combining with th

21、e reality of China higher education, the colleges and universities in China can be divided into three kinds of basic types, in terms of academic university, applicable university with undergraduate courses, and vocational technological university or multiversity or mono-discipline university.2 Accor

22、ding to classification based on mission, Chinese higher education system can be divided into four levels: research based universities, teaching-research based universities, and teaching based colleges and vocational technical colleges. In China, there are about 30-40 universities whose main mission

23、is to do scientific researches and cultivate high-level scientific manpower (postgraduate education); about 100 universities that pay the same attention to cultivating talents as to doing scientific researches; about 500 teaching based universities and colleges that focus on undergraduate education;

24、 about 1600 vocational technical colleges that mainly train technicians and workers.According to classification based on reputation, there is a steep hierarchy in Chinese higher education system. Tsinghua University and Peking University are obviously at the apex of Chinese higher education system.

25、Their goal is to be one of world class universities. Below the two universities, about 40 universities are at the second level, whose goal is to be one of the domestic first-class universities. The universities at the two levels are mostly 985 project institutes and are directly governed by central

26、authorities. These universities can obtain abundant funds annually provided by central ministries and commissions. At the third level are about 100 universities whose goal is to build domestic high-level universities. These universities are mostly 211 project institutes and can obtain adequate funds

27、 allocated by central authorities. The undergraduate universities are at the forth level. The vocational and technical colleges and junior colleges are at the fifth level. The above-mentioned colleges and universities are almost public institutes, not private ones. In Chinese social environment, peo

28、ple usually prefer public key universities to private institutes. Only when they can not succeed in entering public institutes, they have to choose the private institutes with high tuition. It can not be denied that only few distinctive private universities and colleges can gain as much reputation a

29、s public institutes. Whats more, people usually prefer universities that educate liberal education to those vocational and technical colleges. The idea of “academic knowledge is more elegant than technology” is deep-rooted in Chinese mind.The classifications based on mission and on reputation are to

30、 some extent consistent but not perfectly corresponding. The research-based universities mostly obtain more reputation, while the vocational and technical colleges obtain less reputation. Exceptional, only very few colleges that have distinguishing features and good employment situation can obtain h

31、igher reputation. The steep hierarchy of higher education system inevitably leads to the Matthew Effect. The institutes at higher level need not be anxious about funds because they can obtain generous funds from the government and also produce revenues by their own advantages. However, those institu

32、tes at low level usually fall into the dilemma of insufficient funds, which hinders their further development. In order to win higher reputation, the institutes at low level are often inclined to imitate the mode of institutes at high level. For example, the vocational and technical colleges drift f

33、ar from vocational and technical education in order to cater to the needs of liberal education. In order to enhance their status, the teaching-based institutes give up their duty of cultivating talents and spare no effort to do scientific researches regardless of their conditions. The research-based

34、 universities would like to sacrifice time and resources that should be spent in doing researches on continuing education and vocational education activities.The colleges and universities cannot sustain the temptation of the market and stick to their own tasks, which leads to the chaos of tasks and

35、hierarchy. Besides, the national assessment criteria of higher education system are uniform and rigid, which promotes the homogeneity of higher education institutes. Higher education institutes of different types and levels have to receive the uniform assessment criteria, which inevitably results in

36、 homogeneity. If some colleges and universities cannot cling stubbornly to their mission, they will just optionally meet the wants of outside, drifting aimlessly without a definitive direction or sense of progress.3. Conclusions3.1 Conflict between hierarchical and equipollent structure of higher ed

37、ucationThe pros and cons of the division of sectors and the development of hierarchies are fundamental issues in public policy in higher education. The issues involve trade-offs among such values as equity, competence, and liberty. Minimizing sectors, and hence hierarchies, allows for more uniformit

38、y in practices and rewards. The single formal system composed of one type of institution gives greater strength to “coercive comparisons,” in which “have-nots” exercise strong leverage for equity against the “haves,” the less-noble against the noble. 3 If a country commitments to the equipollent all

39、ocation of resources among institutes and establish a uniform national degree that has the same value in the talent market regardless of its hierarchical status, the structure of higher education is not obviously hierarchical. In a more hierarchical higher education system, institutes at high level

40、not only undertake different mission, but also obtain and consolidate abundant resources by governmental policy and self aggrandizement in order to attract the most excellent teachers and students, which in return consolidate and enhance their hierarchical status. So that forms a strict hierarchy of

41、 higher education system. Institutes at a lower level of hierarchy are faced with struggling developmental dilemma.Modern higher education undertakes a mission that is to realize social justiceto make individual accept just treatment. Social justice means not only the equal access of higher educatio

42、n, but also unifying various criterions of higher education in order to make students in different institutes accept equal treatments and obtain the degrees diploma of identical value. The institutes at low level aspire to obtain more resources to enhance their status. They exert strong influence in

43、 order to obtain the equal status and realize the equalization of higher education system. If the higher education system minimizes the hierarchy, higher education institutes will take on structural homogeneity and mission conflict. Along with the rolling up of higher education activities, more and

44、more people aspire to get education. That easily results in structural deficiency, and cannot meet the needs. For example, too large-scale teaching and consult responsibilities undertaken by comprehensive universities occupy the time and resources that was assigned to scientific researches and talen

45、t training, which leads to the chaos of new and old functions of colleges and universities. The limited higher education institutes can not meet more and more general and various activities needs.Under the circumstances, equipollent structure is not an appropriate choice. The pursuit of equipollent

46、reputation is as illusory as the pursuit of classless societythere is no distinction among different institutes. The higher education system with multiple structure helps to undertake heavy tasks and reduce the conflict between contradictory activities of higher education. The activities such as ser

47、vice society may be carried out in some separate institutes. For example, the community colleges established in the United States, the engineering colleges in French, the open universities in England, the local technical colleges. Higher education institutes of different level and types respectively

48、 accomplish different objectives and tasks, which form the ordered structure of higher education system. However, when the hierarchy of higher education system forms, there will be some inequality in assessment and reward criterion. The extreme hierarchical structure will lead to serious social prob

49、lems. For example, the phenomenon that University of Tokyo and Kyoto University in Japan monopolize senior posts result in serious nepotism. Even though the institutes educate a few high-quality talents for governmental departments and industrial sectors, it forms a closed loop that impedes to educa

50、te more talents and to produce more high-quality research results.3.2 Reflection on Chinese higher education system structureIn view of the rigid hierarchical structure of higher education in China, some measures should be taken in order to manage the conflict. The higher education institutes should

51、 locate reasonably to enhance their reputation in the respective levels. The government needs to be on the alert on the hierarchical structure of higher education system and maintaining the mobility of hierarchical levels.3.2.1. Higher education institutes should locate reasonably, to enhance their

52、reputation in the respective levels.Nowadays the demands of social development are diversified and multilevel. There should be enough institutes of all levels and status in higher education system to meet various social needs. The hierarchy does not mean lowliness and nobleness of institutes but sep

53、aration of tasks. Any institute of different types and levels can cultivate top-notch talents and first-rate talents and turn into a famous university that is well-known domestically and influencing internationally. There is no need for colleges and universities to pursuit comprehensive and mutual r

54、ivalry and imitation. 4It is enlightening that there are the most diversified institutes of American higher education in the world. The institutes at different levels should locate reasonably their special tasks and goals, develop their strong points and avoid their weaknesses, and try to enhance th

55、eir social reputation in the respective levels. The research-based universities should concentrate on scientific research and cultivate research talents; the teaching-based institutes should devote to cultivating high-quality undergraduates; the vocational and technical colleges should endeavor to t

56、rain special technical personnel who have strong operational capability. Colleges and universities should exploit their strengths, prioritize some disciplines or majors, shape their own unique characteristics, enhance students quality, and guarantee graduates a good future, which are the important a

57、pproaches for institutes to obtain higher reputation.3.2.2. The higher education institutes should be self-disciplined in order to promote their sound development at separate levels.There is some chaos of location in hierarchical structure of Chinese higher education system, which is against the div

58、ersified development of higher education institutes. If the poor institutes are at the same hierarchy level with rich institutes, the former will insist being treated equally as the later; if the poor institutes are at a separate level, then their demand will not too strong. The colleges and univers

59、ities at different hierarchical level should consciously stick to their own mission and engage in separate task, which helps to maintain the order of academic system. That is to say, the vocational and technical colleges are an institute which engages in training technicians, not in scientific researches or knowledge innovation. The teaching-based institutes should concentrate on the task of cultivating undergraduate talents. The research-based universities should devote to elite

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