Fifteen thousand migrant children in a northwest district of
Beijing are without a guaranteed place in school this coming
semester after 37 schools were ordered to close in Haidian
District.
The local education commission issued a circular ordering 37
schools for children of migrant workers to close due to safety
concerns and a lack of qualified teachers.
"There are over 50,000 migrant children in our district and one
third of them are studying in private schools. A lot of these
schools are not well-equipped and are susceptible to food poisoning
outbreaks, gas leaks, collapsed roofs, fires and traffic
accidents," said Zhu Jianxin, section chief with Haidian Education
Commission.
The statement came as a "major surprise" to Wu Jijun, a maths
teacher with Hongxing School, one of the schools ordered to
close.
"The Haidian Education Commission has checked the migrant
children schools every year since the school was founded in 1999.
They have only found some minor problems with the school in
previous years and asked the school to improve the facilities as
best they could. No serious accident has been reported in seven
years," said Wu.
The education commission's circular said the students will be
allocated places in local public schools. "Parents of these
children will not be expected to pay extra tuition fees," said
Zhu.
But the decision has riled parents and teachers, who believe the
children will struggle to find places in public schools for this
academic year.
"Public schools usually charge migrant parents high fees," said
Wu Jijun.
Other public schools refuse to take in migrant children, citing
a lack of space, according to a letter signed by 43 migrant parents
last Friday asking the education commission for a solution.
Parent pressure has forced Haidian Education Commission to hold
a public meeting this Friday to deal with cases of migrant children
that have been turned away by public schools. "We have ensured them
that their children will have a school to go to," said a commission
officer surnamed Yan.
Some public schools have been left with no choice but to refuse
students. The principle of Yishi primary school, surnamed Wang,
said that around 100 migrant parents have tried to enrol their
children since August. Some class sizes have expanded to 45, almost
exceeding the school's capabilities, he explained.
Social concerns are also obstacles to the relocation plan. "I
will not go to a public school even if my school was actually
closed," said 12-year-old schoolgirl Zhang Yue from Hongxing
School. "My friends who are at public schools told me the local
children don't want to play with them. The local children know we
are not from Beijing and that we are not one of them so the treat
us differently."
Xie Zhenqing, principal of Hongxing School which receives 1,400
students each year, is ignoring orders to close the school. She has
promised parents the school will be open for the first day of the
new semester this Friday.
(Xinhua News Agency August 25, 2006)