Wesleyan University decides not to pursue opening college in China, citing academic freedom and difference in ‘vision’
- China’s Hengdian Group had invited US private liberal arts school to consider teaming up on new campus
- Proposal called for Wesleyan to work with Shanghai Theatre Academy as academic partner in joint venture

Wesleyan University has decided not to pursue an invitation to explore opening a college in China, the president of the private liberal arts school said Thursday.
President Michael Roth said that he met potential partners in the venture on a recent trip to China and that it became evident their vision for the school did not line up with Wesleyan’s focus on liberal education.
“Further conversations with those who proposed the partnership have made it clear that our respective goals could not be sufficiently aligned – not to mention the questions we had around issues of academic freedom and the implications for our home campus,” Roth wrote in a campuswide email.
A Chinese corporation, the Hengdian Group, had invited the private liberal arts school to consider teaming up to open a campus in China. The proposal called for Wesleyan to work with the Shanghai Theatre Academy as an academic partner in the joint venture.
The leader of the joint venture was to be a Chinese Communist Party secretary, as is the case for every university in China, Stephen Angle, director of Wesleyan’s global studies centre, told the Wesleyan Argus student newspaper.