Olympics gives foreigners positive image of China

Written by Meenaa on Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Olympics gives foreigners of China

2008-11-18 (

The more foreigners know about China and visit the country, the higher it gets, but not its people, according to a recent survey released at the 6th Asia Communication and Media Forum in the Communication () last Saturday.

The survey was conducted by a team led by professor Ke Huixin in cooperation with International. The team carried out Internet and face-to-face interviews before, during and after the .

Interviewees were randomly chosen from the United Kingdom, the United States and Singapore to take part in this study on the correlation between the and China’s image including the images of the country, the Chinese people and the capital.

Ten percent more respondents said they visited China because of the , according to the two online polls performed before and after the Olympics.

And the Games inspired many more overseas students to broaden their horizons.

“Thirty percent more students in Harvard apply for after the than that in 2007,” said Ashley Esarey with the for at during the forum.

Younger and wealthier interviewees give the image of China high marks, but lower scores for the Chinese people. And even Singapore, a nation with close cultural bonds with China, holds higher attitudes towards image of China but a lower assessment of Chinese people than that of the UK and the US, professor Ke explained.

However, the statistics also point out films with , the Beijing and are the top three which have the strongest relationship with China’s cultural image, the image of Beijing and China’s economic image respectively.

Media outside of China, , or Chinatown restaurants, and films with rank the top of the list of how foreigners to get access to China.

But of all the channels to become familiar with China, Chinese media was at the bottom of the list, even though the credibility of Chinese media improved during the Olympics.

The follow-up in-depth interviews explain that unbalanced reports in the Chinese media result in the lack of credibility, and professor Ke suggested “we should adopt an easier media environment and utilize overseas media more to serve our national image.”

Held since 2003, the forum held by attracted officials, scholars and journalists from various countries to exchange their opinions and studies on the topic of China’s image and the .

News Related Posts :

News Topics : , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This entry was posted on Wednesday, November 19th, 2008 and is filed under China News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
WooThemes - Say w00t?

Sponsor Results

News of Month :

Advertisement :

Bookmarks Me :

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList Bloglines blogmarks BUMPzee Blogg-Buzz DZone Facebook Google Ma.gnolia Mixx MisterWong muti Newsvine PlugIM ppnow Propeller Rojo Shadows Simpy Slashdot Socializer Sphere Sphinn Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati ThisNext Twitter Windows Live Wists YahooMyWeb

Last News Update :