If you’re applying for the Chinese Government Scholarship (CSC/CGS) in Agriculture, you already know the game is half academics and half communication. The academic side is your degree, grades, research interests, and proposal. The communication side is finding the right professor and contacting them in a way that makes sense for their work—not just your scholarship dreams.
This is exactly why a clean list of official faculty directory links matters so much. When you use the department’s faculty page, you’re not guessing, you’re not scraping random websites, and you’re not relying on outdated email lists. You’re going straight to the place where universities themselves publish:
- Faculty profiles
- Research interests (crop genetics, soil fertility, plant pathology, animal nutrition, etc.)
- Publications and labs
- And, most importantly, official contact information (often the professor’s email)
In Agriculture fields—like Agronomy, Crop Science, Plant Protection, Horticulture, Soil Science, Animal Science, Agricultural Biotechnology, Food Science, Forestry, and Marine/Fisheries—supervisor fit is everything. A professor working on plant disease resistance won’t be the best match if your proposal is about precision irrigation modeling. So the goal is simple: open the right link, find the right faculty member, and email them with a clear fit.
Note: Use Google Chrome for auto-translation Chinese to English.
A lot of these pages are in Chinese, and that’s normal. Chrome translate turns it into something you can navigate quickly.
Now, as you requested, I’m moving the table right after the introduction.
Agriculture Universities List For CSC Scholarship (Faculty Links Table)
✅ In the “Link” column below, I wrote only Click here and linked it.
| University / Institute (Agriculture & Related Fields) | Link | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Qinghai University | Click here | Faculty list page |
| Southwest University | Click here | Agronomy faculty |
| Zhejiang University | Click here | College of Agriculture & Biotechnology |
| Shihezi University | Click here | Agriculture faculty list |
| Tianjin University of Science and Technology | Click here | Faculty directory |
| Shanghai Jiao Tong University | Click here | Agriculture faculty page |
| Shanghai Ocean University | Click here | Choose department according to major |
| Northwest A&F University | Click here | Choose department according to major |
| Ocean University of China | Click here | Faculty directory |
| Dalian Polytechnic University | Click here | Biotech-related page |
| Jiangxi Agricultural University | Click here | Faculty list |
| Jiangsu Normal University | Click here | Find major by direction |
| Nanjing Agricultural University | Click here | Faculty directory |
| Jilin Agricultural University | Click here | Plant protection / related |
| Huazhong Agricultural University | Click here | University schools/faculty index |
| Yangtze University | Click here | Agriculture college faculty |
| Qiqihar University | Click here | Faculty page |
| Jiamusi University | Click here | Faculty info page |
| Guizhou University | Click here | Agriculture college faculty |
| China Agricultural University | Click here | Agriculture & Biotechnology faculty |
| Beijing Forestry University | Click here | Forestry-related faculty |
| Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University | Click here | English faculty listing |
Not linked in your snippet (no URL provided):
- Liaoning University
- Graduate School of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
(If you want, you can paste the official faculty links for these two and I’ll add them into the same table format.)
Why Agriculture applicants need faculty links (not random emails)
Agriculture departments in China can be structured in a dozen different ways. Some universities separate Agronomy from Plant Protection. Others group Crop Science, Genetics, and Seed Science under one school. Some put Fisheries under Ocean Studies. So if you try to “guess emails” from search results, you’ll hit dead ends: outdated pages, wrong departments, lab pages that moved, emails that bounce, or generic office emails that never reach the professor.
Faculty directory links fix that. They give you a stable, official path, and they usually include extra clues you can use to make your email smarter:
- What the professor is currently working on (recent projects)
- Whether they supervise international students
- What labs they run
- Recent publications (so you can reference something real)
- Sometimes even downloadable CVs with contact details
And here’s the best part: when your email mentions a professor’s real research direction—like “maize disease resistance,” “soil microbial ecology,” “precision agriculture,” “agricultural remote sensing,” “aquaculture nutrition,” or “postharvest physiology”—you immediately sound like someone who belongs in that department. That tone matters.
What you’ll find on these faculty pages
Most Agriculture faculty pages aren’t just lists of names. They’re like mini resumes. Depending on the university, you might find:
- Email address (direct or obfuscated like name[at]university.edu.cn)
- Research areas (e.g., plant breeding, pest management, soil fertility)
- Lab or research group link
- Publications and projects
- Education background
- Sometimes application instructions for prospective students
If you land on a page where emails aren’t obvious, don’t give up. Try these quick moves:
- Click the professor’s name → open profile
- Look for “Contact” or “联系方式”
- Check if there’s a PDF CV download
- Switch to English version if available
This is exactly why this post is built around faculty links—it’s the most reliable way to collect correct contacts.
How to quickly get professors’ emails from Chinese websites
Fast path: faculty list → profile → email
Here’s the speed-run approach:
- Open the faculty link from the table.
- Use Chrome translate if needed.
- Identify your department (Agronomy, Plant Protection, Soil & Fertilizer, Animal Science, Fisheries, Forestry, Food Science).
- Open 5–10 professor profiles that match your topic.
- Copy each professor’s email into a spreadsheet (name + research interest + email + link).
That’s it. You can build a clean outreach list in 30–60 minutes if the site is organized.
Use Chrome auto-translate for Chinese pages
Note: Use Google Chrome for auto-translation Chinese to English.
It’s not perfect translation—but it’s perfect enough to find “email,” “research interests,” and “publications,” which is all you need.
Before you email a professor: your preparation checklist
Professors in Agriculture get a lot of scholarship emails. The ones that get replies usually have two qualities: clarity and fit.
Pick a direction: agronomy, crop science, soil science, plant protection
Instead of writing “I want to study Agriculture,” choose one clear lane:
- Crop breeding & genetics (rice, wheat, maize, cotton)
- Plant disease and pest management (plant pathology, entomology)
- Soil science (soil health, nutrient cycling, remediation)
- Horticulture and greenhouse science
- Agricultural biotechnology (molecular biology, gene editing, omics)
- Animal nutrition / veterinary-related agriculture (where applicable)
- Food science and postharvest technology
- Forestry and ecological restoration
- Aquaculture / fisheries (ocean universities)
A clear lane helps you find the right supervisor faster—and helps the professor decide quickly if they can guide you.
Build a “match story” in 3 lines
Before you email anyone, write three lines you can reuse (with customization):
- Your background: “I completed my BS/MS in ___ with research in ___.”
- Your interest: “I want to study ___ focusing on ___.”
- Why them: “Your work on ___ (project/paper topic) matches my proposed direction.”
That tiny “match story” is the difference between a reply and silence.
How to email for CSC supervision and acceptance letter
Subject lines that look professional
Use subjects like:
- “Prospective CSC Applicant — Supervision Inquiry (Agronomy/Crop Science)”
- “Master’s/PhD Supervision Inquiry — [Your Topic] — CSC Scholarship”
- “Research Fit Inquiry — Plant Protection / Soil Science — CSC”
They’re clean, searchable, and not spammy.
Follow-up rules that don’t annoy
- Wait 7–10 days for a follow-up
- Follow up once (twice max)
- Keep it short
- Reattach CV + proposal
If no response after two tries, don’t take it personally. Move to the next professor on your list.
Acceptance letter tips for Agriculture programs
Agriculture supervisors often look for evidence you can actually do research, not just attend classes. So when you ask about acceptance letters, they may check for:
- A workable research topic (not fantasy-level broad)
- Basic methods familiarity (field trials, lab techniques, data analysis)
- Whether your proposal fits their lab resources
- Your seriousness (documents + clear communication)
What supervisors usually want to see
If you want higher reply rates, include:
- A 2–5 page proposal with:
- Problem statement
- Objectives
- Method overview
- Expected outcomes
- CV with any research experience (even small projects matter)
- Transcript (even unofficial at first)
This makes you look like a researcher-in-progress, not just a scholarship seeker.
Common mistakes Agriculture CSC applicants make
These are the classic traps:
- Emailing professors outside your topic area
- Sending a generic message with no reference to their research
- Attaching huge files (15–30MB)
- Asking for acceptance letter in the first sentence
- Not using Chrome translate and giving up too early
- Not tracking who you contacted (then accidentally emailing twice)
A simple tracking sheet fixes most of this: Name, University, Department, Email, Research Area, Date Contacted, Reply Status.
Conclusion
Applying for CSC in Agriculture isn’t just about having the right documents—it’s about finding the right supervisor match and reaching out professionally. The table above gives you direct access to official faculty pages for major Agriculture universities in China, where you can find professors’ profiles and emails. Use Chrome translate to navigate Chinese pages, shortlist faculty by research fit, and email with a clear topic, clear purpose, and clean attachments. Once you get a positive response, you can request an acceptance letter in a respectful, structured way. Build a smart outreach list, stay organized, and treat every email like a research introduction—not a mass message. That’s how you turn links into replies, and replies into real scholarship momentum.
FAQs
1) Will these faculty links show emails immediately?
Sometimes yes, but often you need to click a professor’s profile to see the email or contact section.
2) What if a link has many departments?
Choose your department first (Agronomy, Crop Science, Soil Science, etc.), then open faculty profiles within that department.
3) Should I email multiple professors in the same university?
Yes—2 to 4 professors who match your topic is a smart range. Don’t spam the whole list.
4) How long should my first email be?
Around 150–220 words is ideal. Short, clear, and personalized works best.
5) Do I need an acceptance letter to apply CSC?
It depends on the university and route, but an acceptance letter can strengthen your application and improve your confidence in supervisor fit.