icphso international education
DESCRIPTION
Summary of educational programs offered by US institutions in China for executives. Will also cover new brick and morter programs erected in the PRCTRANSCRIPT
INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION PANELTRAINING CHINA’S BUSINESS
AND MANUFACTURING LEADERS
DEAN W. WOODARD, DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF EDUCATION, GLOBAL OUTREACH & SMALL BUSINESS OMBUDSMAN
ICPHSO 2013 ANNUAL MEETING & SYMPOSIUMFEBRUARY 28, 2013
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS PRESENTATION ARE THOSE OF THE STAFF AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE VIEWS OF THE COMMISSION.
Panelists and Moderator
Mr. Robert Daly, Director of the Maryland China Initiative at the University of Maryland [email protected]
Ms. Madelyn C. Ross, Director of China Initiatives and Global Consortium at George Mason University [email protected]
Ms. Wendy W. Kuran, Associate Vice President for Business Development Duke Kunshan University [email protected]
Mr. Dean W. Woodard, Director of Office of Education, Global Outreach & Small Business Ombudsman [email protected]
Facts about US-China Education Exchanges
• 194,029 Chinese students in U.S. universities-2011 to 2012 (growing 23% per year) average (source: Institute of International Education)
• 38.4% undergraduate 45.6% graduate students 16% short term training
• New York University and Duke University are first to have a “brick and mortar” presence in China
• U.S.-Chinese collaboration in dual degree programs is increasing
• 70 U.S. universities have some type of presence in China• The failure rate of requests for collaboration by U.S. based
universities is approximately 60%. These are for dual degree, summer, and other exchange programs.
MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
MINISTRY OF EDUCATION OF THE PRC
State Administration of Foreign Affairs Experts
Education Zones Established by Province
Provincial Ministry of Education
China, Product Safety and Duke’s Role 1. Duke Kunshan University (DKU)
The big-bet long-term playManagement, technical and
liberal arts education2. CREATe
Duke Clinical Research Institute + UL EduNeering online compliance training
3. Safety at the Source Duke CE custom courses for
toy industry’s Chinese suppliers
– 200 acre site within 1,700 acre Kunshan Yangcheng Lake Science Park
– Six buildings Phase I, 750,000 Sq. Ft
– Phase I construction paid by Kunshan
– Duke investment in master plan, building design, and construction oversight
– First five buildings ready in 2014
Conference Center
Academic Center
Research Center
The “Hardware”: DKU Campus–Phase I
Graduate Degrees
Undergraduate Semesters
Research Centers
Executive Education & Conferences(Begin early 2014)
Management StudiesGlobal Health
Clinical InformaticsMedical Physics
Others
Liberal Arts/LanguagesGlobal Health
Entrepreneurship & InnovationNeuroscience
Others
Global HealthEntrepreneurship
Chinese EnterprisesOthers
Program Development--Phase I (Targeting Fall 2014)
The “Software”: Degree and Non-degree Programs
“Fusion Education”• Best of Chinese and Western Education
• Students from China, U.S. and other parts of the world
• Hard working, inquisitive, versatile, innovative
• Using their intelligence for the social good
• Creative problem solvers with global perspective and imagination
Duke Clinical Research Institute
Thought leadership in clinical research and education
UL
Pioneers in technology-enabled knowledge delivery solutions
IndustryPartners
Drivers of the drug, biologics, and device development process
Clinical Research Sites Core participants in the
conduct of clinical trials
Ethical and Effective Clinical
Research Ecosystem
Ensure patient safety, good data quality, and ultimately, a thorough understanding of drug efficacy and safety
Clinical Research Education and Training
Ethical IssuesOnly 18% of researchers appropriately informed participants about the
study before enrollment
Scientific IssuesDrugs may react differently
in treatment naïve population in emerging
regions
Resource/Financial Issues
High turnover of human capital leads to costly data
quality issues
Acute need to replicate scientific rigor and ethical oversight standards
at all research sites
An Educational Solution to:
Mandarin Education Modules and Beyond
Clinical Research Education
• Self-paced comprehensive education program
• Training for conducting FDA and EMEA compliant studies
• Customized to local regulatory requirements
Communication & Collaboration Portal
• Portal as a communication tool for sponsors
• Sites access custom information
• Forum for networking and knowledge exchange
Registry of Trained Researchers & Sites
• Data on investigators and qualifications
• Information on sites and potential study populations
• Clean, up-to-date data that can facilitate recruitment
13
China Clients
1. SASAC: CEOs of State-Owned Enterprises in USA CEOs in Beijing
2. Roche Diagnostics Director Program in China Manager Program in China
3. Essence Securities
Safety at the Source OpportunityThe Problem: Importers from China sometimes face expensive delays and even recalls due to product specifications and safety standards not being met by the supplier and their extended supply chain.
A Solution: A group of importers and Duke are working together to design short “Safety at the Source” workshops for Chinese manufacturers, to be delivered in China at Duke’s Kunshan campus by Duke CE’s Mandarin-speaking educators.
Safety at the Source Topics• Analytical tools and skills that can be used to solve
supply chain problems• Techniques to flag importer’s faulty designs and risky
timelines• Process control protocols, so that testing and quality
control catch the products that fail to meet export safety standards
• Pre-work to the 3-day workshop: CPSC standards that are translated and online and review basics. Must pass Duke CE test to receive Certificate of Completion.
TwitterFrequent Updates
@CPSCSmallBiz
Slideshare Downloadable Presentationswww.SlideShare.net/USCPSC
Join the EXGO list serve for regular updates. Just send Dean an email.
Desktop Reference Guidewww.cpsc.gov/desktopguide
Dean W. WoodardDirector
Office of Education, Global Outreach, and Small Business Ombudsman (EXGO)
[email protected](301) 504-7651
[email protected](301) 504-7999