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《CEO Magazine》专访理事长乔英女士 Joy Qiao Featured in CEO Magazine

2026-05-15

图片

近日,惠灵顿(中国)教育集团理事长乔英女士接受了全球知名商业刊物《CEO Magazine》的独家专访。报道回顾了她在牛津大学攻读计算机科学专业的求学经历,以及从创办到带领集团享誉海内外的发展历程,勾勒出在时代高速发展的背景下,她致力于推动“人生绽放”的宏阔愿景与持续实践。

 

图片
图片

 

此次专访亦与乔英女士不久前在国际化学校校长学院(AISH)主办的OASIS Day Shanghai上发表的主题演讲相呼应。当日,她围绕《人工智能时代:教育作为文化桥梁的重要性》,与现场来宾共同探索:当科技愈发强大,学校教育的核心意义何在。

 

借助经济合作与发展组织(OECD)发布的《教育为人生绽放:概念框架》这一开创性研究,她指出,教育的目标不应仅局限于提升经济生产力,更应着眼于学生的全面发展:培育其理解世界、欣赏世界、行动于世、适应性解决问题及伦理判断能力,从而成就个体的绽放与人类的共荣。

 

The following is the original report.

以下为报道原文

 

图片

EDUCATION AS A PATHWAY TO HUMAN FLOURISHING

 

Words SASKIA TILLERS COLES

Produced by VIVEK NAIR

 

图片

 

Stemming from a personal quest to educate her own children, Joy Qiao, Chair of Wellington College Education (China), has embarked on a quest to reshape education – championing a shift from grades and job-readiness to lifelong human flourishing in an AI-driven world.

 

Joy Qiao is passionate about the power of a good education. As she puts it, she is a product of the educational systems in China and England.

“I experienced firsthand the similarities and differences,” she says.

Completing her schooling in China before attending Oxford University to study computer science, Qiao was then awarded a highly competitive scholarship at a United States tech company, Intel, where she then worked for a decade.

It was only later, when exploring schooling options for her son, that she first became aware of the gap in China’s education system and began searching for a solution.

“The motivation initially came from my British husband and me,” she tells The CEO Magazine. “We are a biracial family. Therefore, we want our children to grow up bilingually, in a multicultural environment, with a cultural fluency to navigate today’s world.”

 

REDEFINING EDUCATION

 

During her research, Qiao discovered Sir Anthony Seldon, the 13th Master of the original Wellington College in the United Kingdom, a school system that aims to redefine what education means and place the wellbeing of children at the heart.

In a fortuitous turn of events, at that precise time, Sir Anthony was looking for a partner to introduce the Wellington model to China. When Qiao connected with him, it quickly became clear their visions were closely aligned, paving the way for the establishment of Wellington College Tianjin in 2011 and Wellington College International Shanghai in 2014.

Qiao became the school’s first international partner, taking Wellington College’s 160-year legacy to a global stage and launching a network that now spans multiple countries, with further expansion underway.

“We started as a not-for-profit and we remain a not-for-profit,” she says. “It’s not a commercial venture that we have because it came from the very personal, real need of educating my own children. To be able to now do this for 5,000 other children is a great honor and that kept the motivation going.”

 

图片

 

“To be able to now do this for 5,000 other children is a great honor and that kept the motivation going.”

 

Ultimately, Qiao believes that the purpose of education is undergoing a profound transformation. No longer confined to producing human capital for the workforce, she argues it must evolve to nurture something far more enduring.

“We need to transition the education system from having a human capital purpose to a human flourishing purpose,” she says.

“Traditionally, the education system has been more about preparing children for a future job. Therefore, it has focused more on technical competency. But that is viewing a human more as a productive tool, isn’t it?

“When the economy is such that the basic material needs of people are hard to meet, of course that should be the focus – in order to flourish, you need to have food and shelter, you need to have the basic medical care – so I don’t think that was wrong.

“But in just a few short years, we’ve seen the progression of AI, humanoid robots. We can imagine a world in the future where these basic technical tasks can indeed be covered by AI or robots. Therefore, we need to be highly alert about the purpose of education.”

 

THE HUMAN CONNECTION

 

Through a close partnership with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Wellington College has been able to prove, with solid insights, what ‘human flourishing’ really means and the ripple effect it can have globally.

They have formalized the concept of flourishing in a measurable way through the PERMA model: positive emotions, engagement, relationships, meaning and achievement. For Qiao, this framework provides a vital structure for something long considered intangible.

 

图片

 

“We can imagine a world in the future where these basic technical tasks can indeed be covered by AI or robots. Therefore, we need to be highly alert about the purpose of education.”

 

Qiao readily acknowledges that AI is a double-edged sword, providing opportunities for improved efficiencies while increasingly changing the workforce in ways we can’t currently predict.

“We cannot say for certain that any job won’t be able to be replaced by AI in 20 or 50 years,” she says.

“But in K–12 education, I have the firm belief that our teachers won’t be going anywhere anytime soon, because I witnessed the importance of that human connection, that personal touch that teachers have, and how much of an impact it has on students’ learning and wellbeing.”

 

A REAL-WORLD APPROACH

 

This philosophy is operationalized through five core competencies: appreciating, understanding and acting in the world, alongside ethical competence and adaptive problem-solving. Together, they represent a deliberate move away from siloed academic subjects toward a more integrated, real-world approach to learning.

She emphasizes that Wellington’s model isn’t about removing math, science or reading from the curriculum – instead it is about adding in new elements and shifting the overall focus beyond grading toward lifelong flourishing.

In practice, this means students are encouraged to engage with complex societal challenges. Through the Loutang Charity Project, students from Hiba Academy Shanghai – the group’s bilingual school – help support children of migrant workers in Shanghai. Rather than offering one-off donations, they designed a sustained initiative focused on companionship and cultural exchange.

“This is an example of exposing our children to the real world,” Qiao says. “It’s complex problem solving, communication, empathy, influencing skill, strategic planning and leadership. Those are all soft skills that cannot be tested in a standardized test, but they are ever more important in tomorrow’s world, in our opinion.”

 

图片

 

“Whatever bias, whatever stereotype, whatever mistrust and misunderstanding in the world, the best way of solving it is by educating the next generation.”

 

This philosophy extends beyond graduation. With a growing global alumni network, Wellington positions itself as a lifelong community: “Once a Wellingtonian, always a Wellingtonian.”

The mission is not just educational, either, it is deeply cultural – a bridging between East and West, between different perspectives and ways of life.

“We need much more open-mindedness and curiosity,” Qiao concludes.

“I believe education is the only solution. Whatever bias, whatever stereotype, whatever mistrust and misunderstanding in the world, the best way of solving it is by educating the next generation so that they are much more able to accept, understand and value something that’s very different from their own.”

 

进一步了解

惠灵顿(中国)教育集团天津校区  

预约探校、招生咨询

请扫码提交信息

图片

 

惠灵顿(中国)教育集团天津校区及其社群始终致力于确保学生人身安全,守护学生健康成长。

 

 

惠灵顿(中国)教育集团旗下学校
(+86-22) 8758-7199
中国天津市红桥区义德道1号
联系我们隐私声明
Copyright © 2026 Wellington College International Tianjin. All Rights Reserved.
沪ICP备16027332号 沪公网安备31011502006872号
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理事介绍
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校服
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EN
Latest News
最新资讯

《CEO Magazine》专访理事长乔英女士 Joy Qiao Featured in CEO Magazine

2026-05-15

图片

近日,惠灵顿(中国)教育集团理事长乔英女士接受了全球知名商业刊物《CEO Magazine》的独家专访。报道回顾了她在牛津大学攻读计算机科学专业的求学经历,以及从创办到带领集团享誉海内外的发展历程,勾勒出在时代高速发展的背景下,她致力于推动“人生绽放”的宏阔愿景与持续实践。

 

图片
图片

 

此次专访亦与乔英女士不久前在国际化学校校长学院(AISH)主办的OASIS Day Shanghai上发表的主题演讲相呼应。当日,她围绕《人工智能时代:教育作为文化桥梁的重要性》,与现场来宾共同探索:当科技愈发强大,学校教育的核心意义何在。

 

借助经济合作与发展组织(OECD)发布的《教育为人生绽放:概念框架》这一开创性研究,她指出,教育的目标不应仅局限于提升经济生产力,更应着眼于学生的全面发展:培育其理解世界、欣赏世界、行动于世、适应性解决问题及伦理判断能力,从而成就个体的绽放与人类的共荣。

 

The following is the original report.

以下为报道原文

 

图片

EDUCATION AS A PATHWAY TO HUMAN FLOURISHING

 

Words SASKIA TILLERS COLES

Produced by VIVEK NAIR

 

图片

 

Stemming from a personal quest to educate her own children, Joy Qiao, Chair of Wellington College Education (China), has embarked on a quest to reshape education – championing a shift from grades and job-readiness to lifelong human flourishing in an AI-driven world.

 

Joy Qiao is passionate about the power of a good education. As she puts it, she is a product of the educational systems in China and England.

“I experienced firsthand the similarities and differences,” she says.

Completing her schooling in China before attending Oxford University to study computer science, Qiao was then awarded a highly competitive scholarship at a United States tech company, Intel, where she then worked for a decade.

It was only later, when exploring schooling options for her son, that she first became aware of the gap in China’s education system and began searching for a solution.

“The motivation initially came from my British husband and me,” she tells The CEO Magazine. “We are a biracial family. Therefore, we want our children to grow up bilingually, in a multicultural environment, with a cultural fluency to navigate today’s world.”

 

REDEFINING EDUCATION

 

During her research, Qiao discovered Sir Anthony Seldon, the 13th Master of the original Wellington College in the United Kingdom, a school system that aims to redefine what education means and place the wellbeing of children at the heart.

In a fortuitous turn of events, at that precise time, Sir Anthony was looking for a partner to introduce the Wellington model to China. When Qiao connected with him, it quickly became clear their visions were closely aligned, paving the way for the establishment of Wellington College Tianjin in 2011 and Wellington College International Shanghai in 2014.

Qiao became the school’s first international partner, taking Wellington College’s 160-year legacy to a global stage and launching a network that now spans multiple countries, with further expansion underway.

“We started as a not-for-profit and we remain a not-for-profit,” she says. “It’s not a commercial venture that we have because it came from the very personal, real need of educating my own children. To be able to now do this for 5,000 other children is a great honor and that kept the motivation going.”

 

图片

 

“To be able to now do this for 5,000 other children is a great honor and that kept the motivation going.”

 

Ultimately, Qiao believes that the purpose of education is undergoing a profound transformation. No longer confined to producing human capital for the workforce, she argues it must evolve to nurture something far more enduring.

“We need to transition the education system from having a human capital purpose to a human flourishing purpose,” she says.

“Traditionally, the education system has been more about preparing children for a future job. Therefore, it has focused more on technical competency. But that is viewing a human more as a productive tool, isn’t it?

“When the economy is such that the basic material needs of people are hard to meet, of course that should be the focus – in order to flourish, you need to have food and shelter, you need to have the basic medical care – so I don’t think that was wrong.

“But in just a few short years, we’ve seen the progression of AI, humanoid robots. We can imagine a world in the future where these basic technical tasks can indeed be covered by AI or robots. Therefore, we need to be highly alert about the purpose of education.”

 

THE HUMAN CONNECTION

 

Through a close partnership with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Wellington College has been able to prove, with solid insights, what ‘human flourishing’ really means and the ripple effect it can have globally.

They have formalized the concept of flourishing in a measurable way through the PERMA model: positive emotions, engagement, relationships, meaning and achievement. For Qiao, this framework provides a vital structure for something long considered intangible.

 

图片

 

“We can imagine a world in the future where these basic technical tasks can indeed be covered by AI or robots. Therefore, we need to be highly alert about the purpose of education.”

 

Qiao readily acknowledges that AI is a double-edged sword, providing opportunities for improved efficiencies while increasingly changing the workforce in ways we can’t currently predict.

“We cannot say for certain that any job won’t be able to be replaced by AI in 20 or 50 years,” she says.

“But in K–12 education, I have the firm belief that our teachers won’t be going anywhere anytime soon, because I witnessed the importance of that human connection, that personal touch that teachers have, and how much of an impact it has on students’ learning and wellbeing.”

 

A REAL-WORLD APPROACH

 

This philosophy is operationalized through five core competencies: appreciating, understanding and acting in the world, alongside ethical competence and adaptive problem-solving. Together, they represent a deliberate move away from siloed academic subjects toward a more integrated, real-world approach to learning.

She emphasizes that Wellington’s model isn’t about removing math, science or reading from the curriculum – instead it is about adding in new elements and shifting the overall focus beyond grading toward lifelong flourishing.

In practice, this means students are encouraged to engage with complex societal challenges. Through the Loutang Charity Project, students from Hiba Academy Shanghai – the group’s bilingual school – help support children of migrant workers in Shanghai. Rather than offering one-off donations, they designed a sustained initiative focused on companionship and cultural exchange.

“This is an example of exposing our children to the real world,” Qiao says. “It’s complex problem solving, communication, empathy, influencing skill, strategic planning and leadership. Those are all soft skills that cannot be tested in a standardized test, but they are ever more important in tomorrow’s world, in our opinion.”

 

图片

 

“Whatever bias, whatever stereotype, whatever mistrust and misunderstanding in the world, the best way of solving it is by educating the next generation.”

 

This philosophy extends beyond graduation. With a growing global alumni network, Wellington positions itself as a lifelong community: “Once a Wellingtonian, always a Wellingtonian.”

The mission is not just educational, either, it is deeply cultural – a bridging between East and West, between different perspectives and ways of life.

“We need much more open-mindedness and curiosity,” Qiao concludes.

“I believe education is the only solution. Whatever bias, whatever stereotype, whatever mistrust and misunderstanding in the world, the best way of solving it is by educating the next generation so that they are much more able to accept, understand and value something that’s very different from their own.”

 

进一步了解

惠灵顿(中国)教育集团天津校区  

预约探校、招生咨询

请扫码提交信息

图片

 

惠灵顿(中国)教育集团天津校区及其社群始终致力于确保学生人身安全,守护学生健康成长。

 

 

惠灵顿(中国)教育集团旗下学校
联系我们
(+86-22) 8758-7199
中国天津市红桥区义德道1号
更多内容
联系我们
隐私声明
Copyright © 2026 Wellington College International Tianjin. All Rights Reserved. | 沪ICP备16027332号 沪公网安备31011502006872号
关于我们
我们的故事
愿景与价值观
理事介绍
师资介绍
工作机会
可持续发展
所属机构与资质认证
惠灵顿教育节
联系我们
招生报名
云探校
申请流程
学费
奖学金
常见问题
招生咨询
开放日
课程体系
早期教育
小学部
中学部
国际课程中心
为什么选择
11年级
12-13年级
A Level成绩
教学成果
升学指导
大学录取
英语作为第二语言课程
中文课程
教育科技
校园生活
安全保障
辅助课程教学活动
艺术课程
体育
研学活动
课外活动
竞赛
课外课程学院
我们的学生
学生领导力
我们的校友
我们的家长
图书馆
校园服务
餐饮
校服
校车
咖啡厅
幸福关怀
学院式管理
幸福关怀
学生支持
特殊教育需求与融合教育
健康与安全
保健中心
新闻资讯
最新资讯
照片库
视频库
校历
联系我们隐私声明