Engaging with China opens students' eyes to wider world


"I felt like I was leaving a part of myself in China because it has been a very tough journey to integrate myself into the culture and connect with the people here," said Calista Ajibola, a British student aged 18, who has just completed a two-year boarding school scholarship in China.
For someone who had been learning Mandarin for five years, using the language still posed some challenges, as textbook knowledge and real-life application can be very different disciplines.
"People often couldn't understand me when I first arrived in China, and would ask me to switch to English," she said. "But as time went on, armed with the courage to make mistakes, a determination to improve, hours of practice, and plenty of help from my Chinese teacher, my Mandarin eventually reached the point where I could guide my family around in China, chat with taxi drivers, haggle over prices."
Ajibola returned with a mature command of the language, a clearer vision for the future, many genuine friends, countless memories, as well as 30 packs of Chinese-branded instant noodles, and a pile of refrigerator magnets.
"The scholarship program is probably one of the best things that has ever happened to me," she added.
Launched in 2023 by the UK charity Engage with China, in partnership with international schools in China, the scholarship program has enabled 34 British students to embark on a two-year journey to study A-levels in China.
H-J Colston-Inge, director of the educational charity Engage with China, said the aim of the program is to foster China literacy among British youths.
It was in 2018 that she realized that there was a major educational gap in UK schools because knowledge of China was almost entirely absent from the classroom.
"The UK curriculum contains virtually no content on China, despite its global importance," she said.
Compared to short-term study programs, she said, what the project aims to offer is a fully immersive journey, one that allows students to truly experience, with their own eyes, a country on the other side of the world, culturally and socio-economically very different to what they are used to.
Culture shocks can be striking. For Ajibola, the endless high-rise apartments instead of low houses, the "motorcycle army" dominating the roads, and the mosquito bites in the summer were all unusual. But as she put it: "If I had the chance to live it all again, I wouldn't change a thing."
Zoe Capps, who has just completed her first-year scholarship in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, said life in China, a place where "everything felt unfamiliar" at first but which has now become a "second home", has made her much more "mature".
"I always used to say I'm very mature for my age, but I really wasn't," she said. "But now, I have a clear idea of what I want to do in the future... and I know what I need to do."
The scholars have not only developed strong language skills that will give them greater competitiveness in future education and career paths, Colston-Inge said, but have also gained a global mindset and a sense of empathy, an understanding that the world can be vastly diverse.
"Children aren't interested in politics," she pointed out. "They want to make friends. They want to play. They want to do music together, play sports, and so on. That is what's important."
For Capps, above all, it is also the friendships she has made during the first year that matter the most.
"The people I've met here have become some of the most important things in my life," she said.
Soon, the third cohort of 10 teenagers will head to China, ready to begin an entirely new chapter in their lives.
"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step," said Colston-Inge, who herself studied Chinese at university and is now dedicated to passing on her enduring fascination with China to the next generation.

At a reception hosted on Aug 12 by the Education Section of China's embassy in the UK, to welcome the scholarship winners, Zhao Fei, minister of China's embassy in the UK, said tomorrow's world needs builders of bridges between civilizations, especially in an era when challenges ranging from global health crises to climate change require collective effort.
"Though our languages differ, and customs vary, our aspirations for a better life and shared concerns for humanity's future resonate profoundly," he said. "This connection transcends borders, it is universal, and it is shared."