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Tragedy fires education debate ( 2003-07-29 07:40) (China Daily)
A college acceptance and enrolment notice
sent Jing Yanmei and her family into a state of near euphoria, but only for a
few moments.
Anxiety over the 5,000 yuan (US$602) tuition fee immediately
gripped the farming family in Yulin of Northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
Feeling desperate and helpless, Jing's father committed suicide several days
later.
Media reports ignited widespread sympathy accompanied by donations.
Jing got the money for her tuition, but how long will it take her to walk
out of the shadow of her farther's death?
The tragedy of the Jing
family was an extreme case. But those groaning under the heavy burden of college
tuition fees are by no means small in number.
Statistics by the finance
department of the Ministry of Education indicate that in the recent years
students needing help to cover part or all of their tuition fees have comprised
around one fourth of the total. By January, the number of college students on
campus stood at 13 million.
Tuition fees were introduced in 1989 when
each student had to pay 200 yuan (US$24) annually.
When the experimental
period of the reform ended in 1996, charges began to rise sharply. That year,
many colleges and universities raised their fees to 2,000 yuan
(US$240).
Surging
Tuition
By 2000, annual tuition fees in most colleges and universities
exceeded 4,000 yuan (US$482). And this year, fees for most subjects were around
5,000 yuan (US$602).
Charges for subjects such as foreign languages and
medicine are even higher, between 5,000 (US$602) and 6,000 (US$723) in
Beijing-based institutions. Fees in colleges of art have risen beyond 10,000
(US$1,205).
The theory behind fee charging is that higher education
should not be run on a par with compulsory education since it will bring about
high economic returns for the students concerned. In a market economy, higher
education is a kind of investment for one's future, so fees are entirely
reasonable.
Industry For
Profit?
Such a point of view has become widely accepted. But one
family's tragedy has sounded the alert that higher education should not be run
as an industry for profit.
It is the State and society that is the
ultimate beneficiary of higher education and therefore it is in the public
interest to provide for it.
According to standards set by the Ministry of
Education, annual fees should amount to one fourth of the cost to the university
or college for each student. Such a figure, however, is often met with
scepticism and many establishments have exceeded that tariff.
Currently,
tuition fees have risen so that they now far outstrip average
incomes. Statistics indicate that during 1990 and 1997, tuition fees averaged
a rise of 20 per cent, compared to a 6 per cent growth rate in income during the
same period. In 2000, the per capita annual income of urban residents was
6,280 yuan (US$757).
In the light of this, the 4,000-5,000 yuan
(US$482-602) college tuition fees have become a heavy burden. But for those in
the countryside the picture is grim, with average incomes of around only 2,253
yuan (US$271) per capita.
The soaring rise in fees was out
of sync with incomes and would have resulted in more widespread crushing of a
dream of a college education for many more if a system of financial assistance
had not been introduced.
School Loans
But there does exist a number of measures to cushion the
financial shocks of the cost of higher education. And to ensure that students
from poverty-stricken families do not find themselves shut out of colleges and
universities, a series of policies have been worked out by the government which
incorporate scholarships, subsidies, exemptions, loans and part-time
work.
Colleges and universities are required to contribute 10 per cent of
their income from fees to help those students from impoverished
backgrounds.
Since 1999, such students have been eligible to apply for
student loans from State-owned commercial banks, which require no guarantee,
while central or local revenues shoulder part of the loan interest.
By
April last year, 2.64 billion yuan (US$318 million) of contracted loans had been
signed, benefiting 317,000 students.
In September last year, a national
scholarship fund totalling 200 million yuan (US$24 million) a year was
established, which awards 45,000 excellent students each year. All the
award-winners are also completely exempt from tuition fees by their
schools.
Other bursaries initiated by other social groups also provide an
important source of assistance for those from poor families.
Education Watchdog
According to
education authorities, if existing policies are properly carried out, the
government's oath that "not a single college student plagued by poverty should
be abandoned'' can be realized.
These well-intentioned programmes,
however, are not always properly implemented. For example, the
government-sponsored loan programme has not been wholeheartedly embraced by
commercial banks. The small loans have increased to the banks and, more
importantly, exposed them to greater risks as some students would fail to pay
back. So much more remains to be done.
Last Tuesday, the Ministry of
Education issued an urgent document reiterating the government's determination
to ensure that financial help reaches every student in need.
As the new
semester approaches, the education watchdog has asked all colleges and
universities to open a "green passage'' in registration for those who fail to
collect enough money for their tuition fees.
In any incidence of a
student being rejected, on account of inability to pay tuition fees, the college
or university concerned will be held directly accountable, said the
document.
It also requires detailed information on available assistance
programmes be sent together with the acceptance and enrolment notice. Lack of
information about available financial assistance programmes is thought to have
been an important factor in the death of Jing's father.
Will the policy
of the education authorities be fully implemented? Only time will tell. If it is
then the tragedy we have heard much about of late, the unnecessary death of a
farmer in Shaanxi will never be repeated.
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