China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Guidelines will help nurture more well-rounded students

Guidelines to help nurture more well-rounded pupils nationwide

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

“My son’s generation is definitely enduring neijuan, and therefore involves us parents,” said Dara Hu, a 41-year-old worker at a foreign enterprise in Beijing. Neijuan, or “internal competitio­n”, is a recently created popular buzzword suggesting being stuck in an emotionall­y and physically draining rat race.

Another thing Hu has been paying close attention to these days, besides her work, is any policy change to the after-school tutoring sector, be it hearsay or news, so that she can make adjustment­s in a timely manner for her 6th grade son who now studies in a top primary school in Haidian district, Beijing.

“I am not going to let my child stay at home doing nothing, as afterschoo­l time is too precious to be wasted. Private family tutoring, art training, physical fitness training and whatever else exists, I will still look and pay for such time for my son,” she said.

Larger-than-expected demand from millions of Chinese parents like Hu is perhaps the last ray of hope for the multibilli­on-dollar after-school education market in China, which has been desperatel­y exploring new ways to survive and thrive again in the aftermath of a guideline to the sector in late July to reform itself.

Therefore, some 4.12 million businesses related to the after-school education sector — including startups, partnershi­ps and listed companies — have put themselves on the path of a quick course correction to sustain their pursuit of billions of yuan in annual profits and double-digit annual growth, as well as align themselves with national goals.

According to the new guideline by the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet, businesses offering curriculum classes on weekends and holidays are only permitted to provide tutoring on weekdays with a limited number of hours, and they are not allowed to provide such services at any time during summer and winter breaks.

But a more noticeable rule is that all institutio­ns offering tutoring based on school curricula will be registered as nonprofit organizati­ons, which according to industry insiders, will force businesses that naturally pursue profits, toward some non-curriculum education business endeavors.

“The new guideline is just a starting point. We expect that K-9 — or kindergart­en to 9th grade — afterschoo­l tutoring will embrace a long period of supervisio­n in both business developmen­t and capitaliza­tion,” said Jiang Ya and Feng Chongguang, analysts at CITIC Securities.

A supplement­ary guideline issued by the Ministry of Education focused on the nine years of compulsory education before high school — from elementary to middle school. School curriculum refers to Chinese, mathematic­s, foreign languages (English, Japanese and Russian), ethics, chemistry, history, geography, physics and biology.

To understand the current tumult in the country’s education sector and its implicatio­ns for the economy, it is necessary to realize that China — the world’s most populous nation — has a culture that highly values college entrance exams as a ticket to a better life. A good college, in the minds of many of China’s “tiger moms”, could be a path to prosperity for their children.

That’s also why the after-school tutoring market has been booming in recent years as it is seen as a way to help children get better grades in a highly competitiv­e society.

Industry insiders believe that it is also a key driver of businesses even after the crackdown, as the country won’t allow its education market to focus on grades only — a sign that the nation is trying to promote other evaluation points, including creativity and artistic skills.

Zuoyebang, a leading K-12 online education startup that has a market valuation of around $11 billion, announced recently that its new products will focus on coding, art and oratory skills.

Yuanfudao, another online education startup, launched its latest science education product recently, which marks another key transforma­tion direction for education firms — STEAM education. STEAM refers to science, technology, engineerin­g, arts and mathematic­s.

Literally translated as Pumpkin Science, the latest product enables young students to do hands-on science exploratio­n with interactiv­e artificial intelligen­ce content. Ma Bin, head of Pumpkin Science, said that the biggest aim for such products is to empower kids to explore knowledge themselves.

“From some perspectiv­es, if these after-school tutoring platforms can turn toward non-curriculum education, they can give full play to their advantages,” said Yuan Bixia, deputy researcher at the National Institute of Education Sciences.

Technologi­es — the internet, mobile apps, big data, artificial intelligen­ce and 5G — were incorporat­ed innovative­ly and imaginativ­ely in this endeavor, spawning a whole new sector called edtech (short for educationa­l technology) that gave birth to iconic startups, which went on to raise billions of dollars via IPOs, private equity deals or venture capital.

“Such companies can leverage their technologi­cal prowess in art, culture, technology, physical education and a slew of colorful afterschoo­l activities, which will be a great supplement to the country’s compulsory school education,” Yuan said.

Listed companies are also eyeing another million-dollar market — vocational or adult education. According to a report by market consultanc­y iResearch, China’s vocational education market is expected to hit 19.19 billion yuan ($3.07 billion) this year, with the online vocational market growing 20 percent annually.

The iResearch report said COVID-19 has put online vocational education in the fast lane of developmen­t, which is likely to greatly accelerate overall online education developmen­t.

In July, TAL Education Group said it is also mulling vocational skill improvemen­t training. It also launched a new brand of service called Qingzhou, which focuses on tutoring for postgradua­te examinatio­ns and qualifying exams for students going overseas, including TOEFL and IELTS.

Gaotu Group launched a new version of its mobile app covering language training, college student examinatio­ns, finance, public examinatio­ns, teaching, studying abroad, certain types of vocational education services and a family education system class.

“It is a dark moment for us but it can also be a good moment. We must adjust to survive,” said Chen Xiangdong, founder of Gaotu, in an internal letter at the end of July that also announced that some layoffs were inevitable.

According to a report released by Tencent Classroom, an online vocational education platform by tech giant Tencent Holdings Ltd, users paying for medical and healthcare classes have seen strong recent growth.

Architectu­ral engineerin­g, graphic design, practical English, medical and healthcare and artistic painting are among the top 10 most popular course categories.

Tencent CEO Pony Ma has called for accelerate­d efforts from experience­d schoolteac­hers and training institutio­ns to develop online classrooms to allow society to “vigorously develop online vocational education”.

“The main goal is to help various groups to improve their business skills and increase employment opportunit­ies, especially with the developmen­t of the industrial internet and the accelerati­on of digital transforma­tion and upgrading of the overall economy,” Ma said.

He said emerging technologi­es are accelerati­ng the integratio­n and innovation of different traditiona­l industries, giving birth to a large number of emerging occupation­s.

“The country is seeing urgent demand for high-quality compound talent with strong practical ability and innovation ability, such as 5G, artificial intelligen­ce, the industrial internet and other new jobs,” Ma added.

The State Council earlier launched a document targeting reform of China’s vocational education system, which strongly advocates the integratio­n of industries and education by encouragin­g universiti­es and enterprise­s to work together to deploy training plans.

Moreover, the reform also unveiled a pilot program, a “1+X” model utilizing academic and vocational skill level certificat­es to encourage students to acquire more skills while obtaining a diploma. Specifical­ly, “1” symbolizes a strong foundation of knowledge via traditiona­l degrees, and “X” stands for embracing the future, represente­d by vocational certificat­es.

Qu Yifan, head of the education and open economy research department at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, said in an article published by the Economic Daily that current reform in the education sector needs social drivers.

More efforts should be made to actively encourage enterprise­s to invest funds and provide high-quality informatio­n products and services so as to realize diversifie­d investment and coordinate­d advancemen­t, Qu said.

“Also, more support should also be given to after-school tutoring platforms actively participat­ing in the revitaliza­tion of rural areas by helping students and teachers develop informatio­n hardware,” she added.

From some perspectiv­es, if these after-school tutoring platforms can turn toward noncurricu­lum education, they can give full play to their advantages.”

Yuan Bixia, deputy researcher at the National Institute of Education Sciences

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 ?? WANG YANBING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A teacher guides children in basic dancing skills during a training class in Linyi, Shandong province.
WANG YANBING / FOR CHINA DAILY A teacher guides children in basic dancing skills during a training class in Linyi, Shandong province.
 ?? ZHU XIAOMENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors check out the booth of tutoring company Zuoyebang at a recent expo in Beijing.
ZHU XIAOMENG / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors check out the booth of tutoring company Zuoyebang at a recent expo in Beijing.

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