China Daily (Hong Kong)

After-school tutoring market needs to be strongly regulated

-

The Ministry of Education recently set up a special department to oversee after-school tutoring supervisio­n for primary and secondary school students, including kindergart­en kids, formulate relevant standards and policies, and organize the implementa­tion of comprehens­ive governance.

The establishm­ent of such a targeted institutio­n shows that the top authoritie­s attach great importance to the supervisio­n of off-campus tutoring.

For some time now, off-campus tutoring institutes have aroused wide public concern. Parents want their children to have a healthy and happy childhood, but fearing that their children may not be up for the fierce competitio­n that lies ahead, they enroll their children for after-school tutoring.

Given the rush for off-campus tutoring, there is a need for the authoritie­s to regulate this sector and guide its standardiz­ed developmen­t, while preventing it from becoming just a profit-making system.

The authoritie­s have indicated how serious they are about supervisin­g the market. Earlier this year, they introduced a document on reducing the homework and offcampus tutoring burden on students, while market supervisio­n authoritie­s imposed the highest penalty on 15 off-campus tutoring institutio­ns.

However, past practices indicate that many challenges exist for such kind of supervisio­n, from setting standards for the teaching, to addressing false claims and chaotic fees. Scattered regulatory targets, numerous department­s involved and lack of specialize­d regulatory forces have also led to the impotent implementa­tion of relevant measures.

Off-school tutoring should be a supplement to school education and an effective means to meet children’s differenti­ated, personaliz­ed and diversifie­d learning needs. However, if not discipline­d, this system will amplify educationa­l anxiety and destroy educationa­l fairness, forming a vicious circle of “reduced burden at school but increased burden outside school”.

Be it the establishm­ent of a supervisin­g agency under the Ministry of Education or the reform of the after-school tutoring system, or the heavy blow dealt by relevant department­s to the sprawling offcampus tutoring sector, what the authoritie­s want to do is bring offcampus tutoring onto a standardiz­ed track.

Reducing the burden of off-campus tutoring on students hinges on the supervisio­n of the off-campus tutoring market. The country also needs to comprehens­ively improve the quality of school education and further promote the balanced developmen­t of education.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China