The Daily Telegraph

Mother recruits live-stream audience to monitor son’s homework

- By Jenny Pan and Nicola Smith

‘It is scary that the child is living under such a level of surveillan­ce from such a young age’

A MOTHER in China has begun live-streaming her son’s homework sessions on the internet so that viewers can tell her if he slacks off.

The mother, who was only identified by her surname, Zhang, said the results had been “surprising” as her nine-yearold son had finished his studies two to three times faster under the gaze of hundreds of strangers, the South China Morning Post reported.

Ms Zhang, from Sichuan province in south-west China, said that on one day alone more than 900 people had watched him doing his school work on her Douyin account, spurring him to finish a week’s work in one session.

As Douyin does not allow children on its platform, only the boy’s hands and work are visible to the audience.

Ms Zhang said that as well as pushing her son to stop fidgeting and concentrat­e on his studies, her system also had the advantage of freeing up her time to tackle the housework and look after her other child, a three-year-old.

Many parents praised her “creative” method, expressing their own frustratio­n at having to supervise their children while doing homework.

In China, students are strained by homework despite a government policy known as “double reduction”, which was introduced in 2021 to place limitation­s on the volume and difficulty of after-school study.

According to Chinese media, it is common for primary school pupils to still be doing their homework after 9pm.

“I tried this too today. The homework that normally takes three hours, my child finished in 30 minutes … I don’t need to supervise him anymore in holidays,” said one parent.

However, others criticised the idea as having a sinister edge. “It is scary that the child is living under such a level of surveillan­ce from such a young age,” said a commentato­r.

“It is the age to go play and have fun, instead the child is being monitored to do homework,” added another.

Recently, structured online supervisor­s and study rooms have thrived in China, where school children and university students are under increasing pressure to excel academical­ly.

On Taobao, an e-commerce platform, Juanwu Studio, a shop specialisi­ng in virtual study supervisio­n services, has more than 1,600 followers and hundreds of monthly orders, the South China Morning Post reported.

Students can opt between a dedicated one-on-one service or a virtual group, where people can keep each other company as they study together, and which warns them if their concentrat­ion dips.

The system is reportedly popular among university students preparing for postgradua­te exams and certificat­es to make themselves more competitiv­e in the job market.

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