Rural senior high schools in Liaoning
Province can only take in half the children graduating from
junior high schools.
But a first-time, 700 million yuan (US$84 million) loan from the
China Development Bank (CDB) may alleviate the situation in the
Northeast China province.
The cash will be used to build high schools that will allow another
33,000 children to study.
The senior high school enrollment rate in the urban area is around
98 percent, but it goes down to 40 percent in rural areas, said Li
Shusen, vice-director of the Liaoning Provincial Education
Bureau.
School-building is part of a 30-billion-yuan (US$3.6 billion) deal
signed in June. Of that, 4 billion yuan (US$480 million) will go
towards education development.
"I believe this could help break the bottleneck in Liaoning's high
school education and push forward overall education development,"
said Du Benwei, deputy secretary-general of the provincial
government.
The enrollment rate in the countryside is targeted at 70 percent by
2007.
Li said that the money will be used also to improve facilities
in the existing senior middle schools in the countryside.
"Our aim is to construct a high school network covering the whole
province and enable a majority of students to enroll in," said
Li.
Li expected the project would help create 900,000 square-meters of
class space to take in 33,000 more students.
Li said the project would help secure one senior middle school in
each of the province's 41 counties.
Li also said another 1.3-billion-yuan (US$16 million) project to
improve the level of universities and colleges was also undergoing
approval.
"Two factors are responsible for the low enrollment rate in the
countryside. One is shabby infrastructure and the other is the
local economy," said Li.
Different from the nine-year compulsory education, high schools in
Liaoning mainly depend on county financing.
So the local economic development, in some way, determines the
quality of education.
Statistics from Fuxin, a city in the province's northwestern part,
shows that the senior-high enrollment rate there was around 30
percent. In its rural areas, the figure was even lower.
But Li said the local government was taking steps to help students
from low-income families attend school.
Education experts, however, blamed high educational costs for the
low enrollment.
Farmers are glad to send their children to high school, said Cai
Mantang, a researcher from Peking University, but they cannot
afford the ever-increasing fees.
(China Daily December 27, 2004)
|