China Daily

Study burden on children must be eased

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ON FRIDAY, a news conference for the first session of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the nation’s top political advisory body, was held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Wang Guoqing, its spokesman, said it is necessary to effectivel­y reduce the schoolwork burden on students. Southern Metropolis Daily comments:

At the news conference, Wang quoted data saying that the State had issued “dozens of documents” to reduce the schoolwork burden of students from 1951 to 2017. However, the fact is that children in many places have increasing­ly heavier burdens. Data show that an average pupil in China spends 2.82 hours finishing homework assignment­s every day, which is about three times the global average.

Days before Wang made his remarks, the Ministry of Education and three other ministries jointly issued guidelines on the issue, which are described by media reports as “unpreceden­ted”. Compared with the past, the new guidelines have for the first time prohibited extracurri­cular training agencies from holding lessons ahead of the school schedule. They also prohibit primary and secondary school teachers from encouragin­g pupils to attend extracurri­cular courses.

That has hit the point. Many parents complain that primary and secondary school teachers refrain from teaching the necessary knowledge at school, and instead make pupils attend the training courses they hold after class, from which they make extra money. That practice must be ended.

However, that’s only one of the causes why parents send their children to extracurri­cular training courses. Many parents do so in the hope of letting their children perform better in the annual National College Entrance Examinatio­n, or gaokao. In order to effectivel­y cut the academic burden for pupils, it is necessary to reform gaokao first.

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