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Teachers in town offer lifeline to rural schools

Education

Nine-year free compulsory schooling from elementary to middle school started in rural areas in the west of the country in 2006 before being introduced nationwide two years later. Tuition, which used to be a headache for rural families, is no longer a problem in many cases.

XinhuaUpdated: September 10, 2020

Song Juanli teaches pupils at Shanwang Primary School to sing. [Photo/China Daily]

Improved facilities

Funding for education has grown, rising by 8.41 percent year-on-year in 2018, according to the Ministry of Education.

Rural school facilities in Longcheng have also been improved, with campuses renovated. Multimedia devices and internet access have been provided.

However, there is still a severe shortage of teachers in general.

In 2015, some 64 percent of the 13,000 primary and middle schools in Gansu had fewer than 100 students, with 219 schools each having only one student and one teacher at each of 1,190 schools, according to the provincial education authorities.

In Longcheng, nine rural schools are attended by no more than 30 students.

The central government stipulates that there must be one teacher for every 19 students at a primary school, but it is difficult for many rural schools to meet this requirement.

According to a study in 2016 by Liu Shanhuai, a professor at the Faculty of Education at Northeast Normal University in Changchun, Jilin province, nearly 50 percent of the rural schools nationwide had fewer than one teacher per class on average.

The study found that three out of four rural teachers had to take at least two subjects, and more than 40 percent of them taught at least four. The heavy workload undermined the quality of Chinese and math lessons, and the need for music, PE and art classes was barely addressed.

Wang Liwei, the researcher, said the small number of pupils attending rural schools may give them the edge over urban students when it comes to in-depth exchanges with teachers and to instructing students based on their ability.

More than 50 percent of rural elementary schools with a small number of students nationwide were shut down from 2000 to 2010, according to the Ministry of Education.

Teacher Zhao Chunlin helps students rehearse a dance for International Children's Day at Nanqi Primary School in Longcheng. [Photo/Xinhua]

With many children traveling long distances to attend school, this contributed to a rising dropout rate among rural pupils, according to a report by the 21st Century Education Research Institute in 2012.

That year, the central government called a halt to the closure of rural schools. It said families in the countryside were having to spend more than ever to pay for their children's travel and accommodations, Wang Liwei said. "Not all rural families could afford this," she added.

Chu Zhaohui, a researcher at the National Institute of Education Sciences, said governments should not try to reduce costs by closing rural schools. Instead, priority should be given to guaranteeing that every child has the right to an education.

Liu Xiuying, director of the Family Research Center at the China Youth and Children Research Center, said it is better for children to attend schools near their homes if good-quality education is provided.

"Two lifestyles-family life at home and group life at school-are equally important for kids, and are irreplaceable," she said.

In Longcheng, Wang Fengfeng, the music teacher, and his colleagues sometimes risk encountering landslides as they travel to their schools by bus, but he said all the effort involved has been worthwhile.

"Without the traveling teachers, many village schools may have vanished years ago," he added.

As most well-off parents in country areas send their children to towns or cities for better education, poor people with sick and disabled family members at home can barely afford to leave villages, according to the rural teachers.

With China set to eliminate extreme poverty by the end of this year, schools in impoverished rural areas are lending a helping hand in this respect, experts said.

Wang Yaping, the mother of two, said the fact that her children can attend a nearby school has saved her the expense of sending them to one in town.

Li Shuangjiang, the town's deputy education chief, said: "It is necessary to have at least one school in a village. If only old people are living in a village, it makes no sense for us to talk about rural revitalization.

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