Beijing Bailie University
The Beijing Bailie University, previously known in English as Peili Vocational Institute, is a university in Beijing.
Founded in May, 1983, the Beijing Bailie University is one of the earliest non-governmental institutions of higher education officially approved by the Beijing Municipal People's Government, and documented by the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China. It is a full-time vocational college for various professional training, including foreign language, computing, law, accounting, international business, art, and hospitality departments. BBU's qualified to independently issue diplomas and certificates which are recognized by the Chinese government. There are currently more than 7,000 students in total.
Founded by Rewi Alley
BBU was founded by Rewi Alley and is named after Joseph Bailie. Its history dates back to the resistance to the Japanese invasion of China. Alley's role continues to be is acknowledged with his likeness appearing on the top of the home page of the BBU website together with his motto for the school which was 'train for the dawn' of the New China. The name Beijing Bailie University came from a proposal of Alley who was committed to promoting the educational thought of integrating study with practice initiated by an old American educator Joseph Bailie in China. Alley and his close friend Dr. George Hatem were the first two honorary presidents of the university. They hoped that the traditional spirit of the old Shandan Bailie School created in wartime would be passed on in China through the generations.The university also adopted the old Shandan school motto of 'Hands and mind, create and analyze' as the university's motto. The university has played a significant role in practicing and exploring China's structural reform of higher education, being acknowledged as of one of the more influential non-governmental universities in Beijing and throughout China. Up until 2011, BBU's had trained more than 20,000 qualified graduates.