China Daily

‘CORRIDOR CLASSROOM’ PROVIDES A TEACHING TONIC FOR LEUKEMIA KIDS A nonprofit organizati­on is giving seriously ill children in hospital the opportunit­y to continue their studies, as Yuan Quan reports for Xinhua China Features.

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The children are ages 2 to 14, and their classroom always smells of disinfecta­nt. They all wear masks. Few have hair, but those who do have just a few thin strands. They all have leukemia.

Every year, about 15,000 children in China are diagnosed with leukemia, a form of cancer caused by overproduc­tion of damaged white blood cells. Most are ages 2 to 7, and their treatment usually lasts two to three years.

In addition to enduring the pain of bone marrow treatments and chemothera­py, their immune systems are impaired, leaving the children at risk of infection, so they have to say goodbye to a normal life. The disease confines them to hospital wards or home, isolating them from the outside world.

At Peking University First Hospital in downtown Beijing, 80 percent of the child patients with leukemia come from other parts of China. To help them continue their studies, the Beijing New Sunshine Charity Foundation has cooperated with the hospital to run a free school since 2012.

The classroom, a public space in a corridor, welcomes children of all ages. Generally, a full-time teacher and student volunteers give two classes every week, each lasting 90 minutes. Courses at the “corridor classroom” include Chinese, math, English, arts, health and science.

The idea was inspired by Zuo Yan from Anhui province. When the then-8-year-old was diagnosed with aplastic anemia a decade ago, the foundation sponsored his treatment in Beijing. Volunteers found a picture he had drawn of his school days that carried the caption, “I miss school.” That set the idea in motion.

“I realized these children were very eager to keep learning,” said Liu Zhengchen, who was diagnosed with leukemia when he was a university student. In 2001, he founded the foundation to help children with the disease.

However, Liu and his team have discovered that it can be difficult to teach the children. Some close themselves off from other people and rarely speak. Others are restless and uncooperat­ive, and they are always crying.

Understand­ably, most parents are indulgent with their children. “I don’t know how long his life will last. I’ll try my best to make him happy,” said one father.

However, instead of pandering excessivel­y to the children, Liu insists that the teachers treat them like regular students. If children have behavioral problems in class, he guides them to rectify the situation immediatel­y.

“After they recover, they will eventually go back to school and their communitie­s. Then, nobody will care about the doctors in the way their parents and doctors do now,” Liu said. “We want to help them fight the disease, but we also expect them to have the ability to deal with normal life.”

I hope we can help more children with serious illnesses to maintain their studies.”

Liu Zhengchen, the Beijing New Sunshine Charity Foundation

 ?? YUAN QUAN / XINHUA ?? Volunteers help children to use “telephones” made from paper cups and string to explain how sound waves move.
YUAN QUAN / XINHUA Volunteers help children to use “telephones” made from paper cups and string to explain how sound waves move.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A teacher helps a patient during an art class.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A teacher helps a patient during an art class.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A boy shows off a piece of art he has made.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A boy shows off a piece of art he has made.

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