Confucius Institute Names MTSU President McPhee "Person of the Year"

Dec 07, 2013 at 04:11 pm by bryan


MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee was awarded Person of the Year honors by the global organization of Confucius Institutes Saturday in recognition of the university’s work to strengthen educational and cultural ties between China and the U.S.

China’s highest-ranking education leader, Vice Premier Liu Yandong, presented the award to McPhee during the eighth annual Global Confucius Institute Conference in Beijing, which attracted more than 2,200 attendees from 110 countries.

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Also, at the invitation of Xu Lin, vice minister and director-general of the Confucius Institutes, McPhee also delivered remarks during the opening session of the conference.

McPhee was among 30 university presidents or heads of Confucius Institutes to receive the Individual Performance Excellence Award from Hanban, the organization’s headquarters, which oversees more than 400 institutes worldwide.

“This honor is really for the fantastic work by MTSU’s Confucius Institute to broaden the international scope and reach of our campus,” McPhee said. “I am pleased to accept this recognition on behalf of our university’s efforts.”

The Confucius Institute, named after the ancient Chinese philosopher Confucius, is sponsored by China’s Education Ministry to promote Chinese language and culture. It also organizes cultural tours, student exchanges and university partnerships. MTSU joined with China’s Hangzhou Normal University to open its institute in 2010.

Under the leadership of Director Guanping Zheng and Associate Director Yiping Cui, MTSU’s institute has helped teach Chinese language and culture to more than 2,000 students in seven Tennessee counties.

It also offers long-distance language training through satellite TV and the Internet. MTSU’s institute hosted 25 cultural events in 2013, attracting more than 7,000 people.

McPhee told delegates at Saturday’s opening session that he believes “institutions of higher education are obligated to prepare our students for global competency.” Key to this, he said, is to teach “international understanding and respect of the culture of other people.”

“The relationship between China, the United States, Asia, and other parts of the world is most crucial for economic progress, world peace and stability,” he said.

McPhee said MTSU has “aggressively sought to keep our institute very visible both at the university level and in our community.

“It is our intent is to have language programs and cultural activities be a significant part of the university curriculum, the community and our outreach efforts to K-12 public schools.”

McPhee has worked to strengthen MTSU’s international undergraduate and graduate student enrollment, expand its study-abroad and cultural opportunities and develop research collaboration with international partners.

China Agricultural University in Beijing named McPhee an honorary professor, its highest academic award, in May 2007. He was appointed in October 2010 as senior adviser to Hanban and a book of his photographic essays, “China: Through the Eyes of An University President,” published in July 2012 and was released internationally.

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