China Daily

Physics teacher helps ease students’ burdens

- By XIN WEN xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

Physics teacher Qiao Fucun was often puzzled by the apparent lack of filial piety he witnessed after school let out each day, as most parents would carry home their children’s heavy backpacks, leaving the youngsters’ hands free to fidget with electronic devices.

Qiao, 26, who teaches at Dinghui Experiment­al Primary School in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, wondered why parents didn’t let their children carry their own books. Nearly every parent answered the same way — the bags are too heavy.

Qiao then began to research the topic and conducted experiment­s on the weight of backpacks and the effect they have on students’ bodies.

He chose five primary schools in Hangzhou for his experiment­s, sampling 240 students ranging from first to sixth grade.

Nine variables were employed, including determinin­g each student’s center of gravity and proper positionin­g of the backpacks, to find the right attachment point for a support strap that Qiao had designed.

The strap attached to the front of the student’s belt and wrapped up around the body before being clipped to the backpack. This helped take some pressure off the shoulders.

Data analysis from the experiment­s showed that to control the weight of each student’s backpack, the bag’s weight should be less than 10 percent of their total body weight, which means a student weighing 20 kilograms can only carry a bag of 2 kg.

The innovative strap helped transfer a student’s center of gravity more toward the waist and away from the upper body, and proved beneficial to overall musculoske­letal health and developmen­t, Qiao said.

The straps proved most useful if used between the third and sixth grades, as that is a key period in a child’s developmen­t.

“Straps around students’ waists help stimulate muscle growth during and before the period of adolescent developmen­t,” he said, adding that soft-soled shoes also reduced pressure on students’ feet.

Qiao plans to use his strap experiment as part of a research paper he plans to publish in the July issue of Sports Journal.

The central government launched fresh efforts to reduce the academic workload of primary and middle school students in February.

Known as “academic burden reduction”, the new rules prohibit schools from using enrollment tests to evaluate prospectiv­e students, and admissions officials must also take a child’s extracurri­cular activities into considerat­ion during enrollment.

They also forbid afterschoo­l training institutio­ns from engaging in exam-oriented study or hiring tutors from public schools.

Straps around students’ waists help stimulate muscle growth.”

Qiao Fucun, physics teacher at Dinghui Experiment­al Primary School in Zhejiang province

their turn to weigh the goji berries they picked at a plantation in Hongsipu district, Wuzhong, Ningxia Hui autonomous region.

 ?? PHOTOS BY WANG PENG / XINHUA ?? Workers wait
PHOTOS BY WANG PENG / XINHUA Workers wait

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong