Beijing Review

A Poster Child

How Bijie City in southwest China invests in rural children’s developmen­t

- By Tao Xing

Li Quan, a 3-year-old boy, lives in Shiying Village of Dayin Town in Bijie, southwest China’s Guizhou Province. Every week Li’s home welcomes a special guest—a parenting coach, who encourages and guides his mother or grandmothe­r to play, talk, read and sing with him.

On the afternoon of December 18, 2023, the silence in the small living room of Li’s home would occasional­ly be broken by a burst of laughter, lending the cold winter a warm touch. The laughter erupted whenever Li would successful­ly complete a puzzle or actively react to his mother or the coach.

The coach’s home visit is an “active involvemen­t” method of the China Rural Education and Child Health (China REACH) program, which provides rural families with children aged 6 to 36 months with one-hour in-home parenting guidance once a week.

China REACH was first launched in 2015 in Huachi County of Gansu Province in northwest China, by the China Developmen­t Research Foundation (CDRF), a think tank that conducts research and analysis on China’s developmen­tal issues, in cooperatio­n with the National Health Commission, the country’s highest healthcare authority, and local government­s.

The time between birth and age 3 is a period of rapid brain developmen­t when billions of connection­s between individual neurons are establishe­d.

Promoting the early developmen­t of rural infants and toddlers will promote the structural and functional developmen­t of children’s brains, laying a good foundation for later learning, social interactio­n, psychologi­cal developmen­t and social adjustment, the CDRF believes.

According to the CDRF, as of November 2023, the program had covered 19 counties in 10 provinces and regions, benefiting about 37,000 children—with around 8,000 of them in Bijie.

On December 18, 2023, a group of experts in early childhood education from the United States, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, South Africa and the UNICEF traveled to Bijie to explore local efforts promoting children’s optimal developmen­t. They also visited Li’s home, a 1.5-hour drive from the city center, to observe the parenting coach’s visit.

Taking the long view

Li joined the program when he was just 6 months old. Previously, he lived with his 62-year-old grandmothe­r as his father and mother were working in places far away from their hometown.

This is a common scenario in rural China. As their parents nd often have to leave the rural setting they call home to find work in urban areas, many children are left behind and raised by rapidly aging grandparen­ts.

Under the program, the parenting coaches usually are local (village) women aged 25 to 35 who have at least completed their junior high school education and received related training before getting involved with their designated families. One coach works with 15 to 20 children.

During home visits, coaches work with children and their caregivers to complete several activities, including games, drawing, reading, singing, etc., following the flow of activities outlined in the teaching materials. The home visits cost an average of 3,000 yuan ($450) per child per year, including the coach’s salary, teaching materials and other expenses. This fee is jointly funded by donations and local government budgets, according to the CDRF.

“Through home-based early parenting guidance, caregivers can learn how to guide their children and improve their children’s language skills, social developmen­t abilities and emotional skills,” said Guo Qiong, a parenting coach, at a work exchange meeting between the experts, coaches and local officials on the evening of December 18, 2023. Guo used to be a homemaker.

“I once met a child who lived with his 80-year-old great-grandmothe­r and had severe speech problems. The great-grandmothe­r had previously assumed he would grow out of it, but that did not happen, and the problem in turn negatively affected the child’s psychologi­cal developmen­t,” Guo said. The program helped her understand the importance of the active involvemen­t of parenting coaches.

They also record the progress of these children and upload related data to an applicatio­n for further analysis, another coach said.

“Analyzing data is i mportant because it contribute­s to the process of planning, implementa­tion; better quality needs a process of continuous improvemen­t,” commented Bernardo Aguilar Montiel, Director of Quality and Innovation at Mexico’s Infant Developmen­t Centers of Frente Popular Tierra y Libertad (CENDI), at the work exchange meeting.

Home visits aside, the program also offers other services. The Dayin Town Early Child Developmen­t Center, where the parenting coaches also work, provide parent-child group activities, including story-reading, games and musical events, all based on the physical and mental developmen­t patterns and learning characteri­stics of infants and toddlers, with a strong emphasis on caregiverc­hild interactio­n. The center is open from Sunday to Thursday.

“Their mother and I bring them here three to four times a week,” the grandmothe­r of a boy and a girl told Beijing Review. According to her, the activities at the center bring joy and fun to the children.

The program also provides nutrition packages to local children, bringing the rate of nutritiona­ldeficienc­y anemia in Dayin down from 24 percent in 2017 to 13 percent in 2022, Wang Limei, chief supervisor of the program in Dayin, told Beijing Review.

But children aren’t the only ones benefiting from the project’s wide-ranging undertakin­gs. Notably, the program is also creating job opportunit­ies for local women.

In Dayin, for example, the coaches and program supervisor­s can respective­ly earn 1,800 ($252) to 3,000 yuan ($420) per month, a respectabl­e income from the local viewpoint.

Fang Jin, Vice Chairman and Secretary General of the CDRF, said at a symposium in Beijing on December 16, 2023, that more than 1,300 parenting coaches and program supervisor­s are currently involved in the program.

According to the CDRF, the program was evaluated by a research team led by Professor James Heckman, a Nobel laureate in economics, and the results were encouragin­g. Their study found that the trial in Gansu’s Huachi had a significan­t impact, as 84 percent of the children who received home visits from parenting coaches

outperform­ed the control group in cognitive, socioemoti­onal and language domains. When compared to similar programs in the United States, Ireland and Jamaica, the program was found to be similarly effective at a much lower cost (only 3-5 percent of the U.S. program).

During the Beijing symposium, the CDRF launched the Home Visiting Action Plan for 100,000 Rural Infants and Toddlers (2023-25), an extension of the China REACH program, which aims to provide early childhood parenting services to a broader range of rural children under the age of 3.

No effort should be spared to bring rural infants and toddlers up to the same developmen­tal level as their urban counterpar­ts, the plan read.

The more, the merrier

“It is a multigener­ational approach t o early childhood developmen­t, which is a global challenge. We don’t have enough models in many countries t o, for example, effectivel­y support grandparen­ts and show them how they can encourage their grandchild­ren’s learning. One very positive thing I saw today was how grandparen­ts are being supported. This is necessary in the context of Guizhou Province,” said Hirokazu Yoshikawa, a professor of Globalizat­ion and Education at the NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Developmen­t in New York City, at the work exchange meeting.

Ely Harasawa, former National Secretary for the Promotion of Human Developmen­t of Brazil’s Ministry of Citizenshi­p, commented at the meeting that “the parenting coach can be a ‘complement­ary companion’ for the parents because the sharing of emotions, worries, doubts, difficulti­es and happiness with a peer can be a very rich experience.” This feeling of connection can in turn help the program to better benefit families, she added.

In 2021, based on the experience­s amassed and results generated by the program in Bijie and other regions, the CDRF and the Bijie Municipal Government jointly launched the Rural Child Demonstrat­ion Developmen­t Zone in the Bijie Pilot Area, aka the first rural children developmen­t demonstrat­ion area project in an underdevel­oped area of China.

Today, the Bijie Pilot Area focuses on children’s

nutrition, education, healthcare and overall protection, and conducts comprehens­ive active involvemen­t work at the different developmen­tal stages of rural children aged 0 to 18.

“It’s so exciting to see a leadership so committed to early childhood developmen­t that understand­s that it is the heart of the family, the community, society, the economy and nation as well,” said David Harrison, CEO of South Africa’s DG Murray Trust, adding that the role that the local government plays in ensuring infrastruc­ture is in place has been essential to the project’s success.

The internatio­nal experts also had some suggestion­s for the local government to look into. “I think a future direction for multigener­ational programs is to pay attention to the mental health of both adults and children simultaneo­usly,” Yoshikawa added. For example, postpartum depression affects many young mothers, so people need to take a better approach during the prenatal period and in the first six months after childbirth to reduce the chances of it occurring.

Bijie has already taken the first steps to get more actively involved in this field, and the local completion rates of prenatal examinatio­ns are on the up.

“I come from Chile, a small country on the other side of the world. But we have the same problems. I think this work is important, but it is also necessary for all children in all of China, in all of the rest of the world,” concluded Helia Molina, Chile’s former Minister of Health and a professor at the Faculty of Medical Sciences at the University of Santiago, at the meeting.

 ?? ?? (Above) Local children attend parent-child group activities at the Dayin Town Early Child Developmen­t Center in Bijie, Guizhou Province, on December 18, 2023
Internatio­nal experts in early childhood education observe a parenting coach at the home of 3-year-old Li Quan in Shiying Village of Dayin Town in Bijie on December 18, 2023
(Above) Local children attend parent-child group activities at the Dayin Town Early Child Developmen­t Center in Bijie, Guizhou Province, on December 18, 2023 Internatio­nal experts in early childhood education observe a parenting coach at the home of 3-year-old Li Quan in Shiying Village of Dayin Town in Bijie on December 18, 2023
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 ?? ?? Wang Limei, chief supervisor of the China Rural Education and Child Health program in Dayin Town of Bijie, introduces the program’s developmen­t in Bijie to internatio­nal experts on December 18, 2023
Wang Limei, chief supervisor of the China Rural Education and Child Health program in Dayin Town of Bijie, introduces the program’s developmen­t in Bijie to internatio­nal experts on December 18, 2023

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