Due to certain social and economic deficiencies, China's compulsory
education is confronted with a number of serious problems. As a
result, the "Nine-year Compulsory Education" (six years for primary
school plus three years for junior middle school) is not yet fully
available in more than 400 of the country's 2,053 counties,
according to sources from the Ministry of Education.
Since the early 1990s, the Chinese government has made painstaking
efforts to make the "Nine-year Compulsory Education" universal
across the country by the end of the 20th century. It formulated a
series of coordinated policies to ensure the success of the
plan.
China basically achieved the goal at the turn of the 21st century
as 85 percent of the national population had had access to the
"Nine-year Compulsory Education," whereas in the early 1990s the
percentage was 40. Statistics released at the summit of the
education ministers of the world's nine major developing countries
held in 2000 in Brazil indicated that China ranks among the top
ones among the nine participating countries in enrollment rates of
primary and junior high schools.
In
recent years, the country's regional disparities in education have
been narrowed and state funds invested in education has seen a
steady and remarkable increase.
Despite the achievements, there is still a large room for China to
improve its compulsory education. Today the overall level of
compulsory education is still low and many schools in poor rural
areas are starving for funds to better their facilities as well as
faculties. In addition, teachers in quite a few schools haven't
been prepared yet to shift their concentration from exam
instructions to cultivating students' all-round physical and mental
makings.
(China.org.cn by Chen Chao, October 22, 2003)
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