Beijing Review

Rural Infants Fall Behind

China Newsweek July 10

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A report on the early developmen­t of infants and young children under the Rural Education Action Program (REAP) has recently been published. REAP is a program jointly launched by the Center for Chinese Agricultur­al Policy under the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Stanford University’s Institute for Internatio­nal Studies in 2005.

Currently in China, the attention paid to the nurturing of infants, particular­ly in rural areas, is far from enough. The resources, both human and financial, are far from adequate. Nonetheles­s, it has been widely recognized that early-stage developmen­t, especially for infants under 3 years, is key to children’s future growth. So, this problem needs to be solved urgently.

REAP assessed 1,800 infants aged 6-12 months in rural areas of northwest China’s Shaanxi Province and followed their developmen­t up to the age of 24-30 months. Of the infants tested, 41 percent aged less than 12 months lagged behind in their cognitive or language developmen­t. For those aged 24-30 months, the proportion was 53 percent. In cities and wealthy rural areas, the ratio for those aged 6-18 months was only 15 percent.

Presently, China has some 50 million infants, most of whom live in the countrysid­e, according to Zhang Linxiu, director of REAP in China. “The problem of rural infants’ cognitive and language developmen­t has great influence

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