China Daily

After-school classes come under eye of inspectors

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

Seven teams will be sent to all of China’s provinces and autonomous regions to evaluate how well education authoritie­s are regulating after-school training institutio­ns for primary and secondary school students, the Ministry of Education said on Wednesday.

The inspectors, sent by the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Civil Affairs and the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation, will also make random checks on tutoring institutio­ns as well as on primary and middle schools, according to a notice on the education ministry’s website.

Parents and students will be interviewe­d, it said.

Many tutoring institutio­ns focus on teaching pupils how to perform well in exams, rather than aiding the wider educationa­l developmen­t of the child, according to a statement issued by the ministry and three other central government department­s at the end of February.

“They have given additional heavy homework to students and increased the financial burden on families,” the statement said. “Teachers who lure or pressure students to attend after-school training classes will be dealt with seriously or even stripped of their teaching credential­s.”

They are not allowed to organize graded examinatio­ns or conduct competitio­ns for primary and secondary school students. In addition, the results of training from these institutio­ns cannot be used as criteria for future enrollment in primary or middle school, the statement said.

Last month, the ministry released a further rule requiring local education authoritie­s to release detailed plans by the middle of April that will reduce students’ excessive academic burden. The plans should include timetables for specific measures, names of the people in charge and hotlines for the public to report misconduct.

In April, the Guangzhou

Bureau of Education con- ducted secret inspection­s of 91 tutoring institutio­ns. Eighty-two institutio­ns were found to have engaged in misconduct, including safety hazards, exaggerate­d advertisin­g and operating without proper permits.

Fifty-one institutio­ns were given one month to make correction­s, while 31 were closed and fees were refunded to parents.

About 160 after-school training institutio­ns signed an agreement at a China Associatio­n for Non-Government­al Education conference in Zhengzhou, Henan province, to avoid teaching beyond the syllabus, examorient­ed tutoring, mock exams or academic competitio­ns.

They also agreed to avoid connection­s with teachers in public schools or to use exaggerate­d advertisin­g to lure students into after-school tutoring programs.

You Sen, deputy secretaryg­eneral of the Chinese Society of Education, said the guidelines are intended to increase the threshold for the sector and shut down substandar­d institutio­ns.

“In the long term, afterschoo­l training institutio­ns should only play a supplement­ary role in China’s education system, focusing on offering individual­ized educationa­l services and promoting students’ all-around developmen­t,” You said.

After-school training institutio­ns should only play a supplement­ary role in China’s education system.”

You Sen, deputy secretary-general of the Chinese Society of Education

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