The construction project and all costs of operating Wenzhou–Kean University will be paid for through tuition and financing provided by the municipal and provincial governments in China. There will be no cost to Kean University or the state of New Jersey.[2] The partnership will be with Wenzhou University, a institution in Zhejiang Province, which will bear the entire cost, estimated to exceed $60 million. This funding will cover the construction of the planned 300-acre campus, as well as all faculty expenses and the daily operational costs of the school.[3]
Controversies
A 2015 NJ.com article stated that job postings of the university allegedly favored Chinese Communist Party (CCP) affiliates for non-faculty roles.[4]
A November 2018 NJ.com article stated that, faculty and staff at Wenzhou–Kean University would be employed as personnel at the branch campus and their salaries would be paid in Chinese yuan. Randi Weingarten, head of the American Federation of Teachers, criticized Kean University for "not [respecting] American values, the values of justice, the values of free expression, the values of opportunity". Kean University responded that Weingarten used an appeal to xenophobia, that these changes would have little impact on faculty and staff, and that the university's human resources management practices were consistent with other United States universities with branch campuses in China.[5]
In a 2023 Inside Higher Ed article, an anonymous former instructor at Wenzhou–Kean University stated that faculty members were instructed to avoid a series of politically sensitive issues.[6]
^"Administrative Report: Kean University To Open The First American University In China", Administrative ReportArchived 2006-09-01 at the Wayback Machine; Union, New Jersey; June 12, 2006.
Unless otherwise stated, all the universities and colleges listed are provincial or municipal public universities and colleges. DBC: Double First-Class Construction; 985: Project 985; 211: Project 211; Key: National Key Universities; P+M: provincial and ministerial co-founded universities. Degree: institutions offering degree education; Professional: institutions offering professional training and certificates. Vocational: institutions offering vocational training and diploma. Private: privately founded. Foreign: Sino-foreign cooperative joint universities; Independent: Independent college affiliated to a university; Continuing: Continuing education institutions; Private: Privately founded As of April 2018, there were 108 higher education institutions in Zhejiang, among which 36 were private, and 9 Continuing education institutions.