The central government will budget to recruit more than 100,000
teachers in the coming five years for primary and junior high
schools in poor western counties.
The central government will pay about 15,000 yuan (US$1,875) a
year for each teacher while local governments will subsidize their
housing and social security expenditure.
This is the latest step in a slew of government initiatives to
promote education in the western regions, where lower economic
levels have rocked the local educational foundation as some poor
students cannot pay for tuition and many teaching staff have gone
east.
By next year, students receiving nine-year compulsory education
will no longer have to pay for their tuition as it will be covered
by the public fund. Poor students will be offered subsidies to
cover their boarding and other daily expenses.
The government will also make efforts to put an end to willful
and unjustified charges by some greedy schools.
With this new initiative, the country has taken a step further
in its implementation of assistance programs to the west put
forward during the 10th Five-Year Plan period (2001-05). It has
come to realize that the ultimate way out for the west lies in a
forward-looking solution that tackles the long-term and sustainable
development potential of the region.
For years, we have put much of the emphasis on economic
rejuvenation of the region, drafting favorable investment policies
and putting in more money to build facilities, paving the way for
smooth economic growth.
But the region will not be truly rejuvenated in the long run
without making some fundamental changes to its educational
landscape.
Education makes a significant difference to individual as well
as regional development. But the huge gap in education resources
between eastern and western China has held back the western
regions. Low pay and poor working conditions have led to a serious
exodus of qualified teachers to the more prosperous eastern
cities.
The shortage of qualified teachers in western China's primary
and junior high schools is up to 111,000, according to the Ministry
of Education. If students' inability to pay for their tuition has
been the major problem of western education, after their tuition is
cancelled, the lack of teaching staff would become the No1
bottleneck.
A large number of temporary teachers without teaching
certificates now work at schools in the rural west. They contribute
to local education and receive low pay and the quality of teaching
can barely be guaranteed.
The current recruitment program will hopefully make up for the
shortage of teachers in the western regions.
(China Daily May 22, 2006)