China Daily

Draft focuses on education in the home

Law emphasizes key role of parents, proscribes violence as way of teaching

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn Cao Yin contribute­d to this story.

Parents or guardians should not use violence as a way to teach children lessons, a draft law said on Wednesday.

The draft family education law also said they should not discrimina­te against children based on their gender or physical condition, or coerce, lure, incite or use minors to violate laws, regulation­s or social morality.

The draft law was presented to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress for first reading on Wednesday. A draft generally becomes law after being reviewed by the top legislatur­e three times.

Parents and guardians shoulder the primary responsibi­lity to educate children, while the government, schools and society should offer support for family education, the draft said, adding that the country should intervene when necessary.

Law enforcemen­t should admonish parents or ask them to improve family education when children have received administra­tive punishment from the police or committed minor crimes, it said.

Courts could strip guardiansh­ip from parents if law enforcemen­t authoritie­s find they have violated the rights and interests of minors and have refused to correct their behavior.

The police will be able to fine parents who refuse to make correction­s up to 1,000 yuan ($155) or detain them for up to five days, according to the draft.

Schools should notify parents when students have seriously violated regulation­s or laws and offer parents guidance in educating children. When parents refuse to fulfill their responsibi­lities, schools should notify the local residentia­l or village committee or the parents’ employers, it said.

Legislator He Yiting, a member of the NPC’s Social Developmen­t Affairs Committee, said that family education, as the beginning of a child’s education, is not only closely associated with the lifelong developmen­t of children and family wellbeing, but also concerns national developmen­t and social stability.

However, many parents only value children’s academic performanc­e and physical well-being and ignore their moral developmen­t and psychologi­cal health, he said when reporting to the NPC Standing Committee.

There are also parents who do not know how to educate their children and some even resort to physical abuse, leading to extreme cases of injury, he said.

 ?? WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A parent helps her son do his homework at home in Shanghai in March.
WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A parent helps her son do his homework at home in Shanghai in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong