China Daily

Beware craze for computer programmin­g training

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REPORTEDLY, a training agency in Wenjiao district, Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, has seen the scale of its computer programmin­g class increase exponentia­lly from dozens of students to tens of thousands in three years. China Daily reporter Li Yang comments:

In early 2017, the State Council sought to encourage computer programmin­g education in primary and middle schools so as to boost the developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce. Which fired the starting gun for training agencies to scramble to provide such education while most schools were still waiting for the Education Ministry’s not-yet-ready deployment.

The popularity of computer programmin­g training is not limited to Hangzhou, it has become the most robust growth point in the extracurri­cular training market nationwide.

Yet a worrying phenomenon is that many trainees have just bid farewell to their toddler phase, and are too young to be learning programmin­g skills.

It is noteworthy that, in most cases, it is parents who seat the minors behind monitors for hours, irrespecti­ve of whether the children have developed the necessary capability to study programmin­g.

Ironically, the parents even claim that if their children cannot win prizes in the Internatio­nal Olympiad in Informatic­s — award winners are favorites among key universiti­es — the training contribute­s to their intelligen­ce.

But that plea has been heard many times before when large numbers of children were squeezed into extracurri­cular training classes customized for contestant­s of mathematic Olympics, as if all the kids are buried pearls that deserve a place in the crown of mathematic­s. While the truth is the difficult training exhausts most children’s interests and curiosity in mathematic­s at an early age.

In fact, almost all final winners of the Olympiads in mathematic­s, physics, chemistry, biology and informatic­s are gifted children, and few of them are products of the weekend extracurri­cular training, which is nothing but a means to make money from parents desperate to ensure their children do not get left behind in the race for good jobs.

Pulling up seedlings will not help them grow up, but kill them instantly.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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