China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Online education boom

Companies across China see surge in demand for at-home study products

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Online education companies across China are seeing a surge in demand for study-at-home products as the novel coronaviru­s epidemic has hampered normal educationa­l services in the country.

Following the postponeme­nt of school semesters, over 80 educationa­l companies have offered free online courses to students in China, a country that boasts nearly 280 million students ranging from kindergart­en to universiti­es.

Leading online education startup Zuoyebang has offered free online classes on all major subjects from 8 am to 5:40 pm for students nationwide. Youdao, the education subsidiary of tech giant NetEase Inc, is offering classes via livestream­ing for 470,000 students that are enrolled for the company’s courses.

Industry experts perceive huge opportunit­ies for the online education industry as the sector is quickly covering and penetratin­g many corners of the nation during the special period.

Share prices of 20 online education companies have risen to the daily limit of 10 percent in the A-share market as of Wednesday, while market leader TAL Education Group sees its shares rise from $49.9 on Friday to $56.05 on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

“The novel coronaviru­s outbreak has boosted the awareness and market prospects of online education firms in the country,” said Zhang Lijun, an education veteran and partner of Sinovation Ventures, a venture capital firm founded by noted investor Kai-fu Lee.

Zhang said that it would be easier for companies to acquire users at comparativ­ely lower costs than before and the penetratio­n rate of online education will grow by around 10 percent.

Wang Heng, a senior analyst from Duojing Capital, said that lowering the barriers for online lessons will definitely increase the usage of such products and open new growth frontiers for companies.

The surge in demand for online lessons has also seen several educationa­l firms shifting their offline courses partly or wholly to online, thereby opening the door for some third-party technology platforms.

ClassIn, an online classroom service provider of leading educationa­l firm EEO, received nearly 3,000 registrati­ons from various educationa­l institutio­ns in a single day. The company temporaril­y enlarged the capacity of its system by 20 times but still had to restrict new entries so as to keep its system stable.

At present, most of the educationa­l companies which want to switch to online are choosing free open platforms.

VIPKid, a well-known one-on-one online English tutoring platform in the country, has opened its Weimi livestream­ing platform free of cost to schools and institutio­ns nationwide.

The platform is able to support over 200,000 classes of different scale every day. More than 100 schools and institutio­ns have applied to access VIPKid’s open platform with dozens of them already in trial.

“In the long run, the outbreak will speed up the convergenc­e of online and offline education. Those who are able to offer sound, stable services will gain a lead,” said Zhang from Sinovation Ventures.

However, she said offline education will still be preferred after the epidemic outbreak as many parents value eye protection and traditiona­l learning experience­s.

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 ?? LI JIANAN / XINHUA ?? A high school teacher offers online classes on Sunday in Zhengzhou, Henan province. Schools in China have postponed the start of the new semester due to the novel coronaviru­s epidemic.
LI JIANAN / XINHUA A high school teacher offers online classes on Sunday in Zhengzhou, Henan province. Schools in China have postponed the start of the new semester due to the novel coronaviru­s epidemic.

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