The Phnom Penh Post

China to get tough on foreign teachers

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CHINA on Tuesday issued draft rules to toughen oversight of hundreds of thousands of foreign teachers who could be fired for acts such as “words and deeds” considered harmful to the country’s sovereignt­y.

Foreign teachers will also be banned from “illegally engaging in religious education or preaching”, according to the guidelines drawn up by the education, foreign, public security and science ministries.

The rules have been submitted for public comments until August 21 before final approval.

In recent years Beijing has tried to make China’s education system more patriotic, eliminatin­g what it perceives to be immoral foreign influences.

The new guidelines would require teachers to undergo at least 20 hours of training on topics such as the Chinese constituti­on and teachers’ ethics when they take up employment.

They follow a spate of detentions of foreign teachers in recent years for sex and drug abuse.

The guidelines say teachers should be fired for such criminal offences.

Those found to be violating the rules must be reported to educationa­l authoritie­s.

The guidelines also require all foreign teachers to possess a bachelor’s degree or higher, at least two years of teaching experience and relevant language teaching qualificat­ions.

Schools that illegally hire foreign teachers without the right qualificat­ions or approval, or mislead the public about teachers’ qualificat­ions, can be fined up to 10,000 yuan ($1,400) per teacher.

Teaching in China can be a lucrative career path for foreigners, especially if they are young graduates.

Demand for foreign English teachers in particular remains robust, and many command salaries that are much higher than average teachers.

More than 400,000 foreign teachers were working in China, a 2017 survey by State media found, but only one third were employed legally.

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