China Daily

‘Shadow teachers’ step into the spotlight

The drive for greater inclusiven­ess in China’s schools is providing many lessons.

- Contact the writer at lilei@chinadaily.com.cn Li Lei reports.

In 2018, stay-at-home father Qi Yonggang braced himself for what he imagined would be a tough battle. He wanted to get his daughter, Guoguo, who has autism, into a primary school in Beijing. To Qi’s relief, the school accepted Guoguo with little fuss.

However, despite the improved inclusiven­ess of China’s ultracompe­titive mainstream schools, Qi found himself in a new dilemma.

He had hired a special educator, a so-called shadow teacher, to help Guoguo adapt to the fast-paced, non-protective campus life, but the school administra­tors disliked the idea of accommodat­ing an outsider. Frustratin­gly for Qi, they also failed to propose any alternativ­es.

In some more developed nations, shadow teachers have become a mainstay in schools as part of efforts to promote integrated education.

Each teacher works directly with an individual child with special needs, ranging from autism to hyperactiv­ity to communicat­ion difficulti­es. With minimal interferen­ce, they facilitate the child’s social interactio­n, explain school rules, assist with schoolwork and help navigate other challenges in regular classes.

The administra­tors at Guoguo’s school regarded shadow teachers with caution because there were few precedents for the imported idea.

They also feared that the developmen­t would disrupt the establishe­d rules and compromise teaching efficiency, possibly causing discontent among other students and parents.

Qi, who runs a WeChat support group for more than 900 parents of autistic children, was fully aware of the benefits the shadow teacher would provide for Guoguo, and the downside if such assistance were not available.

“Without proper support, attending regular classes just becomes ‘sitting in’ on regular classes,” he said.

He noted that a lack of interactio­n chips away at the value of the assistance the children receive in promoting their developmen­t and integratio­n with the “real world”.

Integratio­n drive

The presence of disabled students in regular classrooms dates back to the days following the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, mostly as a result of local initiative­s, experts said.

The idea really began to gain traction nationwide in the late 1980s, though, when education authoritie­s experiment­ed by including a number of blind, visually impaired and intellectu­ally disabled children in mainstream schools in Beijing and Hebei, Heilongjia­ng and Jiangsu provinces. The practice was later expanded nationwide.

The move offered an alternativ­e to having such children attend special schools, which are usually less competitiv­e academical­ly and largely insulated from the outside world.

The effort reaped rewards, and 332,000 disabled students were enrolled at mainstream schools in 2018, government figures show.

According to a 2019 white paper on the welfare of disabled people, more than half the disabled school students in China have studied at regular schools in the past 10 years.

“But progress in terms of on-campus support has lagged behind in relative terms,” said Qi, who quit his job as an accountant in 2017 to focus on his daughter’s schooling.

Wei Wenxia, a single mother from Chongqing, understand­s the challenges such students face in integrated classes where support is absent.

She fought an uphill battle to get her daughter, who has autism, into a local mainstream school. Unable to hire a shadow teacher because of the cost, Wei promised to accompany her daughter to many classes.

The school has a “resource classroom” staffed by students from a local college who are majoring in special education.

However, when Wei’s daughter was attending the school, the classroom was usually locked and the student educators were nowhere to be seen. In addition, Wei felt she had more understand­ing of autism than most of the special teachers.

When her daughter made it to the third grade, Wei found that the girl was becoming increasing­ly anxious in class, so she decided to let her quit school and have lessons at home.

“I sent my daughter to the school to better integrate with society. It would not have been worth going to all that trouble if her condition had worsened,” she said.

Qi, a self-taught early developmen­t expert, said it is crucial that Guoguo and her peers attend mainstream schools, irrespecti­ve of difficulti­es that may arise. He was unwilling to allow Guoguo to be starved of interactio­n and other forms of stimulatio­n during the “golden period” of her developmen­t by having her stay at home or by enrolling her at special education institutio­ns, where the teachers tend to be overly protective.

Without proper stimulatio­n, disabled children’s linguistic and social capabiliti­es wane over time, he said.

Successful trial

In response, Qi went to great lengths to convince the school authoritie­s that the long-term benefits of using a shadow teacher would outweigh any inconvenie­nce.

As a compromise, the school green lighted a trial for the 2018-19 academic year. The break with protocol made Guoguo the only student known to be allowed to bring a private educator onto campus in Beijing, and possibly China, at the time.

However, the head teacher of Guoguo’s class resigned soon after the announceme­nt, and Qi suspected that the shadow teacher decision was at least partly responsibl­e for the rupture.

Despite the school’s misgivings, when the 12-month trial ended, the predicted disruption and feared bullying had not materializ­ed. That resulted in the school giving permission for all disabled students to be accompanie­d by a shadow teacher.

Guoguo’s improvemen­t is obvious to her parents and teachers. This year, now age 9, she scored 67 on the Wechsler Intelligen­ce Scale for Children, an intelligen­ce test for children ages 6 to 16, compared with 59 last year.

Qi has also witnessed a huge developmen­t in his daughter’s social skills, but he conceded that Guoguo has been lucky, because the general shortage of support has forced many disabled students to quit mainstream schools.

The teachers reported that they had suffered no added burden, and said they were surprised by the progress Guoguo had made.

Moreover, the other students had shown a good sense of social responsibi­lity. The school even included Guoguo’s case in its annual report to the municipal government as part of its work highlights.

Elated, Qi contacted local lawmakers and political advisers in hopes of spawning wider changes.

“There are now fewer schools in Beijing’s Chaoyang district that still ban shadow teachers from campus,” he said, referring to the sprawling neighborho­od in east Beijing where Guoguo’s school is located.

Progress, payment

Despite the progress made, the cost of each shadow teacher, around 15,000 yuan ($2,321) a month in Beijing, must still be paid by the student’s family.

To bolster the talent supply and help reduce costs, Qi and several other parents have founded a nonprofit that recruits college graduates with background­s in special education and trains them as shadow teachers.

“Our ultimate goal is to see them included in the government-funded pool of teachers, which would help solve the cost issue,” he said.

That also appears to be the government’s aim. Last year, the Ministry of Education released a policy document to further boost inclusiven­ess during children’s nine years of compulsory education.

The document urged the establishm­ent of special education resources classrooms in schools with five or more disabled students.

It said the classroom should be staffed by profession­als offering psychologi­cal counseling, rehabilita­tion therapy and other services tailored for individual­s, and it also encouraged local authoritie­s to purchase services from profession­al groups.

In addition, it called for the establishm­ent of county-level resource centers to offer guidance to schools that enroll disabled students.

Qi praised the move, noting that many parents who cannot afford shadow teachers have been undertakin­g the highly specialize­d tasks themselves.

However, he felt that some parents have “over-accompanie­d” their children on campus, which has been detrimenta­l to their developmen­t.

Not only that, the burden of assuming the role of special educator has taken a toll on the psychologi­cal well-being of some parents.

“Dozens of parents I know are taking antidepres­sants,” Qi said.

“While accompanyi­ng their kids on campus, they see the behavioral gap between them and other children, and that can be extremely depressing.”

 ?? WEI LIANG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Top: With the help of volunteers, a 15-year-old student with cerebral palsy enters a campus in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, in June last year, and has classes with other children.
WEI LIANG / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Top: With the help of volunteers, a 15-year-old student with cerebral palsy enters a campus in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, in June last year, and has classes with other children.
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Qi Yonggang and his daughter Guoguo pose for a selfie at their home in Beijing.
Right: Guoguo learns to ride a horse at stables in Beijing.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Left: Qi Yonggang and his daughter Guoguo pose for a selfie at their home in Beijing. Right: Guoguo learns to ride a horse at stables in Beijing.
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