More than nine percent of Chinese migrant children under the age
of 14 are out of school contravening China's law requiring
nine-years of compulsory education, according to a latest report
issued by the China National Children Center.
The report says 9.3 percent of China's school-age migrant
children are out of school, with 46.9 percent of six-year-olds yet
to start school.
China's Compulsory Education Law requires children over the age
of six, regardless of gender or ethnicity to attend school. In some
areas where conditions are poor the children can start school at
age seven.
The report finds "overage" elementary school students to be a
serious problem among migrant children. Migrant children aged 13
who are still in elementary school account for 31.5 percent of
students. By that age they should be in secondary schools.
The study also finds that more than 60 percent of the children
between the ages 12 and 14 who are out of school have already
started working.
By the end of 2004, more than 6.4 million rural children of
compulsory education age were living in cities with their parents.
Another 22 million rural children remain in their family's rural
homes, while their parents worked in cities, according to the
Ministry of Education.
Children who were brought to cities by their migrant parents are
often charged school fees that are much higher than those charged
by schools in rural areas. The large number of school-aged migrant
children living in cities is straining urban education
resources.
Numerous private schools for migrant children have been
established in cities which are often criticized for ill-equipped,
lacking infrastructure and qualified teachers.
In July, the Haidian Education Commission of Beijing forced 37
private schools for migrant children in the district to close and
reassigned the 15,000 affected students to nearby public
schools.
The report called for attention from governments and all social
sectors to improve education policies for migrant children to
secure their right to receive compulsory education.
(Xinhua News Agency December 11, 2006)
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