China Daily

College students require teaching, not babysittin­g

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ON MONDAY, Northwest University of Political Science and Law required all its freshmen to attend morning reading activities and to register for the activity by means of face-recognitio­n machines. Yet they had to cancel it on the same day because thousands of students formed long waiting lines as there were only four machines. Thepaper.cn comments:

The administra­tive staff of the university obviously failed to prepare properly. They required more than 3,000 students to attend the morning reading activities, yet they only installed four face-recognitio­n machines. They should have expected the long lines of students, yet didn’t.

Now they have addressed the problem. But the situation has also highlighte­d that certain universiti­es treat their students like kids and always hope to intervene in every detail of their lives. In order to make students “obedient”, they introduce all kinds of high-tech devices and require students to sign in when they attend classes. In some universiti­es, the students have to apply and obtain approval from the administra­tive staff before they can leave campus.

College students are already adults who can act responsibl­y for themselves. They need tutors, not babysitter­s.

Such “regulatory” measures are also a waste of money and human resources.

Of course, we do not mean to encourage the students to stay in their dormitorie­s all morning. Morning exercises and morning readings will help them become strong both physically and spirituall­y. However, universiti­es only have the right to encourage, not to mandatoril­y require, students to attend these activities. Students have the right to their own time and this should be protected.

That’s a lesson that not only NUPSL should learn, but also other universiti­es nationwide.

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