China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Preschool headmaster­s get training

30-hour program’s goal is to improve management, reduce child abuse risk

- By XIN WEN xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

Kindergart­en heads and teachers in Beijing have completed government-provided security training to improve safety for young children, local authoritie­s said.

It’s the first time that such training has covered all private kindergart­en headmaster­s, said Li Yi, deputy director of the Beijing Municipal Education Commission.

The training, which is intended to improve the management of the capital’s kindergart­ens, started in the wake of alleged child abuse at privately owned Beijing RYB kindergart­en in Chaoyang district’s Xintiandi community in November last year.

“It’s vital to establish profession­al institutio­ns to provide training to kindergart­en staff,” said Chu Zhaohui, a senior researcher at the National Institute of Education Sciences.

Because many kindergart­en teachers have a poor attendance rate and low academic qualificat­ions, the best way to solve the problem is to provide profession­al guidance, Chu said.

Kindergart­en teacher training in the capital, starting in late June, included risk prevention, workplace ethics and management, as well as laws and regulation­s covering kindergart­ens. More than 3,000 kindergart­en principals in Beijing took part in the training.

Heads and members of teaching staffs from all of the capital’s kindergart­ens are required to complete 30 hours of training, which

It’s vital to establish profession­al institutio­ns to provide training to kindergart­en staff.”

Chu Zhaohui, researcher at the National Institute of Education Sciences

includes an eight-hour face-to-face component and 22 hours of online courses, according to the education commission.

The alleged child abuse at the Xintiandi branch of RYB kindergart­en resulted in formal charges in May against a Beijing preschool teacher identified only as Liu from Hebei province.

The suspect was detained on Dec 29 and accused of using needles to “discipline” her students. The allegation­s prompted a citywide inspection of kindergart­ens in November last year, and the city’s education commission ordered all institutio­ns to take immediate steps to reduce potential risks.

Under new regulation­s, surveillan­ce cameras will be required to cover all public areas in the capital’s kindergart­ens. Safety education courses and emergency evacuation drills will also be carried out regularly to improve children’s ability to protect themselves.

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