About 12,000 students will enjoy four-year study free
of charge at six elite teaching universities this year thanks to a
new policy of the Chinese government.
Wang Xuming, spokesman with the Ministry of Education,
said at a press conference on Friday that six top teaching
universities in Beijing, Shanghai, Changchun, Wuhan, Xi'an and
Chongqing plan to enroll about 12,000 students after the national
college entrance examination slated for June this year.
Most of the students will come from China's central
and western region, Wang noted.
From September this year when the autumn semester
begins, tuition and accommodation fees will be scrapped for
freshmen majoring in education at the six teaching universities
under the Ministry of Education.
The students will also be granted an
allowance.
The cost of the measure will be covered by the central
budget, according to a trial program approved by the State Council
on May 9 this year.
To be eligible for free tuition, the student must
agree to work at a primary or middle school for at least ten years
after graduation and spend the first two years in a rural
school.
Students who have a change of heart during their
studies can choose another occupation on graduation, according to
the measures, but in this case they must pay back the tuition fees
in full.
The central government has asked local education
departments and schools to get prepared and to ensure all of the
12,000 students can find a job at a middle or primary school upon
graduation, said Song Yonggang, deputy head of the ministry's
teacher's education office on the same press conference.
China currently has more
than 10.43 million teachers in its middle and primary schools. Many
schools, particularly rural one, are in short of competent
teachers.
Offering free education for future teachers had been a
policy in China for decades until the 1990s, when a market-oriented
policy was introduced by the government.
Education at most universities -- tuition,
accommodation and expenses -- costs a student an average of about
10,000 yuan (US$1,280) a year so the measures represent savings of
about 40,000 yuan (US$5,120) over a four-year course of
study.
Reporting to the National People's Congress in March,
Premier Wen Jiabao said the government will institute
free education for students majoring in education in teacher
colleges directly under the Ministry of Education.
"The measure will demonstrate to the general public
the importance of the teaching field, create an atmosphere of
respect for teachers and education in society, increase awareness
of the value of the educational profession, produce large numbers
of outstanding teachers, encourage prominent educators to run
schools and spur more outstanding young people to become lifelong
educators," Wen said.
The new policy will be extended to more teachers'
colleges will pioneering programs at the six universities prove
successful, the Ministry said.
(Xinhua News Agency May 19, 2007)
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