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The improvement of the basic education has always been top on the government
agenda in China. By 1965 the enrollment ratio of school age children reached
84.7 percent, increasing by 65 percentage points over 1946 before new
China was founded.
1. Popularization of Primary Education
On December 3, 1980, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
China (CPC) and the State Council jointly announced the Decision on the
Matters Relating to Popularization of Primary Education, which reads:
"The historic task to popularize primary education throughout the
country shall be fulfilled in the 1980s, and the secondary education shall
be popularized in the economically developed regions. The goal shall be
realized before 1985 in some areas where the economy and education are
well developed. And the deadline may be extended for those remote or mountainous
areas having little number of residents."
On May 6, 1983, another circular was made by the Central Committee of
the CPC and the State Council. It required that given the new situation
in rural China which saw rapid economic development, plans and measures
for popularizing primary education be carried out by management at each
level including those of district, town, village and production team.
According to the document, specific standards and measures should be worked
out by governments at provincial and city levels, and diversified measures
may be adopted for running school in rural areas.
To carry out the policy, governments at various levels worked out their
plans to improve popularization of primary education. Non-government efforts
were brought to full play. In 1984, the average enrollment ratio of school-age
children throughout the nation reached 95 percent, and 393 counties reached
the goal of popularizing primary education after being checked by the
government authorities concerned.
2. Implementing Compulsory Education
On May 27, 1985, the Decision of the CPC Central Committee on Reform
of Educational Institution was announced. The document summarized the
experiences and lessons in this regard in the past 30-odds years, while
estimated how education should be developed to meet the demand of China's
progress in the coming new century, and how the Western countries had
developed and improved their educational causes. An important programmatic
document in development of China's educational cause and conducting educational
reform, it placed emphasis on developing basic education. It, for the
first time, broke the state monopoly of education, thus giving right to
local governments and even non-government bodies to run schools by relying
upon efforts of their own. Because of the new policy, more schools have
been established by relying on financial supports of both government and
non-government sources, indicating a big progress in development of the
basic education.
The Decision pointed out that the state-regulated nine-year compulsory
education was the basis of developing education and reforming the existing
educational institution. It called for an urgent making of the compulsory
education law. On April 12, 1986, the Compulsory Education Law was ratified
by NPC at the Fourth Session of its Sixth Standing Committee and the law
began to take effect on July 1, 1986.
The legislation is believed to be a cornerstone in development of China's
educational cause. Well-developed basic education nationwide will help
improve the Chinese people's quality and educational level, a vital matter
in realizing China's industrialization and modernization.
According to the Compulsory Education Law, of 18 articles, the state
implements nine-year compulsory education, which shall be based on government's
educational policies so as to promote development of youngsters in the
development of morals, intelligence and health. Since education is compulsory,
it should be guaranteed by the joint efforts of the government, communities
and families. It regulates that all children aged six, with no distinction
in gender, nationality and race, shall enroll in school, although the
age may be raised to seven or even older in economically poor regions.
The system of primary education falls into two stages--elementary and
secondary education. The law also provides regulations on financial sources
and teacher qualifications, as well as prohibiting employment of school-aged
children and teenagers.
Governments of various levels are responsible for implementing compulsory
education, and they have worked out their own implementing regulations.
A check and merit system was established in governments' educational departments,
and a supervision system carried out covering educational bodies throughout
the country.
3. Enhancing Establishment of Middle Schools
While popularization of primary education is widely carried out in the
country, that of compulsory education at junior middle school level has
been gradually implemented. Reforms have been made, which include changing
the enrollment system for junior middle schools, abolishing the entrance
examination for middle school, correcting the old practice based on proportion
of students entering schools of a higher grade, and establishing a supervisory
and evaluation system for proper implementation of nine-year compulsory
education. Local governments have tried their best to improve the educational
infrastructure and teachers' quality, thus laying a solid foundation for
further development.
4. Deepening Educational Reform
On National Day in 1983, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping wrote words of
encouragement for Beijing's Jingshan School, saying, "Education should
serve the modernization drive while gearing to the world and future."
This provided a guiding principle for working out the future strategy
of China's educational development, which means that primary education
is the basis for fostering the talent for China's modernization in the
21st century. Since then, a series of reforms have been made to improve
the basic education system.
In July 1985, the Teaching Plan for Full-time Primary and Junior Middle
Schools (Draft) was made, and in July 1986, the Syllabus of All the Courses
Taught in the Full-time Primary and Junior Middle Schools was worked out.
In order to improve moral education in schools, a syllabus for moral
education was made by the State Education Commission in the mid-1980s,
according to which a series of reforms in the political course were tried
in some schools with a new curriculum.
Teaching some working skills was also made compulsory so as to encourage
students to love doing labor and learn some necessary skills. Educational
authorities also required middle school students do regular social and
production work.
The comprehensive and substantial reform of primary and secondary education
began around 1980. Since then, the reform has gradually deepened from
changing the way of teaching to reforming the curriculum, from changing
a single course to reforming the comprehensive teaching philosophy, and
from working out short-term teaching plans to creating long-term education
blueprints.
Great efforts have been made by the government to improve primary and
secondary education in rural, mountainous, pastoral, forest and mining
areas, and those where ethnic groups live. By 1998, there were 13,948
senior middle schools in the country, with 9.38 million students. Those
in junior middle school totaled 54.5 million, with an enrollment ratio
of 87.3 percent. Students in primary schools totaled 139.54 million, with
an enrollment rate of 98.9 percent. Junior middle school drop-outs accounted
for 3.23 percent of the schooling age population, and those of primary
schools 0.93 percent.
According to the Plan for Vigorously Developing Education for the 21st
Century in 1999, China will basically realize the nine-year compulsory
education and eradicate illiteracy among the young and middle-aged population
by early of the 21st century. Programs to improve students' comprehensive
quality and train teachers will also be launched soon.
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