China Daily

Adviser: More reforms needed to control cram schools

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

Editor’s Note: China Daily is publishing a series of stories focusing on major issues expected to be discussed at the annual sessions of the National People’s Congress and the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, known as the two sessions, the biggest annual political event in China, which generally starts in early March. Some stories will also look at how the participan­ts in the two sessions, deputies and political advisers, perform their duties.

China should continue to push reforms in education and further regulate after-school training institutio­ns to reduce the academic burden on primary and secondary school students, a policy adviser said.

Zhu Yongxin, deputy secretaryg­eneral of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the country’s top political advisory body, said that while schools have taken measures to reduce students’ workloads, after-school institutio­ns have increased the burden.

In August 2018, the General Office of the State Council attempted to ease the heavy workload of primary and secondary school students by issuing a guideline aimed at regulating cram schools.

The guideline banned cram schools from engaging in exam-oriented training and discourage­d teaching students materials that are too advanced in core subjects such as Mandarin, math and English.

While education authoritie­s have made progress in applying the regulation­s, there is still fierce competitio­n for students to get into good schools.

After-school training institutio­ns are motivated to run examorient­ed courses, leading to heavy student workloads, said Zhu, who is also vicechairm­an of the Central Committee of the China Associatio­n for Promoting Democracy, one of China’s eight non-Communist political parties.

“We should not pit school education and after-school training against each other,” he said.

“Schools should realize that they cannot return to exam-oriented education and training institutio­ns should not conduct advanced training outside the teaching syllabus,” he said in an interview with China Daily ahead of this year’s two sessions, the annual meetings of the country’s top legislativ­e and political advisory bodies.

Thousands of legislator­s and advisers will gather in early March in Beijing, where they are expected to discuss proposals for formulatin­g the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for National Economic and Social Developmen­t and the Long-Range Objectives Through the Year 2035.

The excessive academic burden on students is why the proposals have stressed the need to regulate afterschoo­l training institutio­ns, Zhu said.

While schools should play the main role in children’s education, after-school training institutio­ns can supplement this with personaliz­ed and diverse training, he said.

Education authoritie­s should guide training institutio­ns to make good use of their strength in course research and developmen­t, he said. Training institutio­ns that are substandar­d or not properly accredited should be closed, while quality ones should have more room for developmen­t, he added.

As a leading education expert, Zhu said his proposals for this year’s two sessions mainly focus on that area and the culture sector.

“I am concerned about the gender imbalance in kindergart­en, primary and secondary school teaching. There has been a low proportion of male teachers in these schools as teaching is not regarded as a profession with a high social status,” he said.

Zhu is also focused on promoting universal reading, which he said he believes is key to addressing the imbalance in the quality of education between urban and rural areas.

“We should promote education equity by enabling all students, urban or rural, to have more opportunit­ies in reading. Every student, especially those from less developed areas, should have access to all kinds of books. Equity in reading will promote equity in education.”

He suggested that more needs to be done to promote reading among government officials and teachers to encourage more people to be interested in the pursuit.

Education opening-up

Regarding internatio­nal cooperatio­n in education, he said China will not slow its opening-up in the field and will enter a high-level and quality-oriented phase. That will enable more contributi­ons to educationa­l developmen­t worldwide during the 14th Five-Year Plan period.

The country will continue to promote the quality and efficacy of internatio­nal education cooperatio­n in its pursuit of high-quality developmen­t, Zhu said.

“We are committed to building a community with a shared future for mankind and we firmly believe that China and the rest of the world are highly dependent on each other,” he said.

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Zhu Yongxin

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