"Instruction was delivered one-third online by Stevens' faculty, one-third by Chinese instructors in Beijing, and one-third by Stevens faculty in intensive courses in China," said Dr. Audrey Curtis, the Director of Stevens Telecommunications Management Program at The Howe School. "Students in Beijing earned their masters from Stevens - no different from degrees the school confers in Hoboken." Curtis spent ten weeks in Beijing, delivering live instruction. Other Stevens faculty also spent time teaching in the course at the BIT campus.
The first 21 students started classes in November 2003. Of the graduating class, three have already applied for Ph.D. programs - with one of them applying to Stevens.
"BIT faculty teaching with us are highly qualified," continued Curtis. " Stevens' China program is a giant step in extending Stevens' graduate education to students outside the US."
The Stevens-BIT program, approved by the Chinese Ministry of Education and other government bodies, is the first such "hybrid" degree from a US university in China. The program is in its final stage of accreditation by the education ministry. Beijing Institute Professors Liu, Fang, Wang and Xie participated in delivering course instruction at BIT.
In addition to Curtis and Ryan, other Stevens faculty who taught in the program include Bill Stahlin, Beth Reidel, Clint Smith and Carl Utz.