Home>News Center>China
       
 

Compulsory education law under amendment
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-02-26 09:46

According to statistics of the Ministry of Education, drop-out rate among students under compulsory education in big and middle-sized cities were almost zero in 2004, but it was 2.45 percent for rural primary school students and 3.9 percent for rural junior high school students, or even as high as 5 percent inrural areas in seven provinces in central and west China.

Zhang Jianhua, a State Council (or the cabinet) official in charge of education, science and culture, said the draft amendmen tasks the provincial governments, rather than county-level governments as stipulated in the to-be-revised law, to take the responsibility to fund compulsory education in their own provinces.

The draft also demands expenses for this purpose should be listed in the budget of the provincial governments, said Zhang, director of the Education, Science and Cultural Department of the Legislative Affairs Office, the State Council.

"And the governments are required to give priority to rural schools when they draw up the budget for compulsory education," Zhang said, citing the provisions of the draft amendment, which also demand the central government to cover the cost of textbooks for rural compulsory education in the central and western regions.

To reinforce the teaching staff of rural schools, the draft amendment requires teachers in urban public schools who are to receive the senior professional title or are freshly employed teachers to go to underdeveloped rural areas to teach for a certain time.

The Chinese government has been paying great heeds to improve rural education, with a recent promise to allocate 218 billion yuan (US$26.9 billion) in the next five years to boost compulsory education in the countryside.

Rural students are expected to be exempted from all tuition fees and other educational expenses, including the costs of textbooks, winter heat, and transportation, according to the government.

Education experts who are worried about the negative impact of the widening wealth gap on education, urged equal opportunities for all children to receive education in order to root out hidden danger of social instability.


Page: 12



Snowstorm in Shenyang
Road accident kills 24 in Guizhou
New measures to promote energy conservation
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

China sees threat of "massive" bird flu outbreak

 

   
 

EU advised to reconsider dumping claim

 

   
 

China space walk, docking planned

 

   
 

23 officials punished for child-trafficking

 

   
 

China-US trade mutually beneficial: Ministry

 

   
 

China's Internet media calls for self-discipline

 

   
  23 officials punished for child-trafficking
   
  China sees threat of "massive" bird flu outbreak
   
  China's Internet media calls for self-discipline
   
  China sentences orphanage director, nine others to prison for baby-trafficking
   
  US to discuss trade disputes with China
   
  Heavy snow continues in NE China province
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
China's Property law draft set for further revisions
   
Legislature mulls change in Criminal Law
   
Affordable education top priority
   
One man's Long March to educate
   
China pledges free 9-year education for students in rural west
   
Free education in rural areas
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement