Education Minister Zhou Ji said that
compulsory education in western rural areas will be improved this
year through the establishment of boarding schools.
He was speaking at a press
conference in Beijing on Thursday.
Compulsory education has been in
place since 1986, and is considered a cornerstone of educational
development, industrialization and modernization.
However, students in nearly 8
percent of areas in western China still fall through the gaps in
the system.
"Central government will invest 10
billion yuan (aboust US$1.3 billion) to build 7,730 boarding
schools for 2.03 million students in 955 counties in the next four
years," Zhou said.
"In the future, students in these
areas will no longer have to walk a long way everyday to school,"
he explained, "They will be able to study in spacious and well-lit
classrooms and stay in safe and comfortable dormitories."
Zhou said high priority will also be
attached to meeting the special learning and living needs of
students from poorer families.
Last autumn, the government
earmarked funds to provide free textbooks for 24 million students
from poor families in the central and western regions.
Zhou promised that they would
continue to be supported to at least 2007.
Modern distance education and
renovation of old schoolhouses are also being considered to improve
education in western areas.
(China.org.cn by Unisumoon January
28, 2005)
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