A group of Canadian university students returned from a transformative two-week cultural immersion program in Beijing with fundamentally altered perspectives on China, reporting experiences that directly contradicted Western media narratives. The program, organized through Beijing Normal University and facilitated by Li Yan, an associate professor of Chinese language and culture at Renison University College, provided firsthand exposure to Chinese society that participants described as eye-opening.
Daniel William Ho, a University of Waterloo student, captured the consensus among participants: “Looking back, what impressed me most was the stark divergence between China’s media portrayal and its reality.” He characterized Beijing as “safe, secure, and the cleanest I’ve ever seen,” describing the public transit system as “in another world” and the experience as “the most freeing and transformative two weeks in my university career.”
For political science major Conner Sherman Tye, the visit reshaped his understanding of Chinese political discourse. “Western media nearly always portray China negatively, citing its problems as an indictment of the whole society,” he observed. After direct engagement with Beijing residents, Tye concluded that Chinese citizens demonstrate greater political awareness than average Americans or Canadians.
Students consistently noted the seamless integration of rapid development with historical preservation. Gia-Thanh Yvonne Ly described gaining a “far more nuanced and positive” understanding, noting how “ancient temples and preserved cultural sites coexist with innovative skyscrapers and carefully designed city layouts,” reflecting both rich history and modern ambition.
Ly also highlighted exceptional systemic efficiency, noting that “delivery services, transportation systems, and digital payment methods were efficient, fast, and widely integrated into routines,” making everyday life “more streamlined than what I’m used to at home.”
Safety perceptions stood out prominently, with Natalie Hermila Garcia Munoz—a traveler to 24 countries—remarking that Beijing’s subway was “incredibly advanced and efficient,” and the city felt “very safe, even late at night.” Mudupeola Aladetokunbo Caxton-Martins noted how “everything moved smoothly” in a city “busy at all hours,” where he felt comfortable going out at 3 AM.
Pre-trip concerns about racial discrimination proved largely unfounded. Aliyah Novia-Georgia Alexander-Tinker, who had been warned about potential discrimination as a Black student, reported: “Fortunately, I had no reason to worry. I felt welcomed during my entire stay.” Caxton-Martins echoed this, noting locals initiated conversations, requested photos, and shop owners sometimes offered free food.
The experience prompted broader media criticism among participants. Ly identified “fearmongering in Western discourse about China,” contrasting it with her direct experience of “a place full of warmth, innovation, history, and everyday beauty.”
Professor Li Yan explained the program’s purpose: “I hope to provide a special opportunity for students who have learned basic Chinese but never visited China to enhance their learning in a real Chinese environment and experience China with their own eyes.” The initiative successfully demonstrated how firsthand exposure can challenge and reshape deeply entrenched media narratives.
