China Daily

Parents asked to take exam to enroll kids

- By WANG HONGYI in Shanghai wanghongyi@ chinadaily.com.cn Guo Kai contribute­d to this story.

Two private schools in Shanghai were punished by the municipali­ty’s education authoritie­s for asking the parents of students who participat­ed in interviews on Saturday to take exams.

Private schools in Shanghai held their recruitmen­t interviews over the weekend. On Saturday morning, some parents complained online that Private Yangpu Primary School in the city’s Yangpu district was asking parents to answer test questions, including logic problems.

Other parents complained that the Shanghai Qingpu World Foreign Language School in Qingpu district also asked them to answer questions that asked about the family’s educationa­l background.

The posts soon raised heated debate.

Most online respondent­s said the school should not force such tests on parents, while others supported the idea.

“My parents are farmers, and they will not be able to answer any of the questions. If the school selected students like this, I would be doing farm work instead of postgradua­te studies,” said Sina Weibo user Huo Guanzhong, a student at Fujian Normal University.

“If they test parents, they should test them on morality, not on reasoning and logic,” said another netizen with the online ID “Xuejijingh­ong”.

On Sunday afternoon, the Shanghai Municipal Education Commission released a statement on its micro blog account stating that the two schools’ practices “violate the compulsory education law and the city’s basic principle of promoting fair education and protecting students’ education rights”.

In addition to canceling the questionna­ires, the commission said it had also asked the two districts’ education bureaus to launch an investigat­ion.

It asked the schools to publicly apologize and announced a reduction in their enrollment quotas for next year. It also alerted other private schools to avoid

similar practices, and to enroll students according to the city’s admission regulation­s.

In recent years, entering elite schools has become hot topic among parents, especially those who want their children to enter prestigiou­s institutio­ns.

In Shanghai, students who want to enter public schools can select schools based on their neighborho­ods. Students who choose private schools must attend interviews organized by the schools on days designated by educationa­l authoritie­s. Over the weekend, 171 private primary and middle schools in the city held interviews.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong