The Ministry of Education released the National Report on
China's Education for All in Beijing yesterday, saying that budgets
allocated for rural education had increased dramatically between
2000 and 2004, but that rural and literacy education still face
numerous problems.
"Rural education is still the weakest link, and newly-allocated
educational funds will be used mainly in rural areas," said Vice
Minister Zhang Xinsheng.
He said the aim to increase education funding from 3.41 percent
of GDP in 2003 to four?percent would be met in future, and
that central government would allocate special funds to implement
the Modern Distant Education Program in rural elementary and
secondary schools in the next five years.
"All rural students receiving nine-year compulsory (elementary
and junior secondary) education will be exempt from paying tuition
and other fees by 2010, a goal we put forward in the 11th Five-Year
Plan (2006-10)," said Han Jin, director of the ministry's
department of planning. "Already 36 million rural students are
benefiting from this policy."
Upon completion, all rural secondary schools and primary schools
will gain access to satellite educational programs and have DVD
equipment in class to teach the same courses used in cities like
Beijing and Shanghai.
The report said that in 2004, 107 billion yuan (US$13.2 billion)
was budgeted for rural primary education and 57.4 billion yuan
(US$7 billion) for rural junior secondary education, an increase of
74.35 and 87.69 percent respectively on 2000.
But China still has 87 million illiterate people, 23 million of
whom were aged between 15 and 50, and eight percent of counties
have yet to implement nine-year compulsory education, all in poorer
western regions.
Zhang, who was elected chairman of UNESCO's Executive Board on
October 24, said the organization's 5th High Level Group Meeting on
Education For All, co-sponsored by the ministry, will be held in
Beijing on November 28.
(China Daily November 11, 2005)