Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Boosting migrants' education (2)

(China Daily)

09:33, January 14, 2013

She said she worries that if her children are made to transfer to public schools, they will have trouble adapting to the new environment.

"After all, the children have been in the school since they were 5," she said.
Enrolling in a public school requires parents to submit a series of certificates, such as a temporary residence permit and a certificate of employment, which can be difficult for migrant workers to acquire.

Tang Siping, principal of the Zhenxing School in Haidian district in Beijing, said the district's education authority is doing all they can to help the migrant workers' children.

"The government authorized two private schools for migrant workers' children, so some children who cannot enroll in public schools, for reasons such as their parents cannot gather all the certification needed, can go to the private schools," Tang said. Zhenxing School is one of the authorized schools. It currently has 1,500 students.

Although the education authority provides some financial support to the authorized schools, Tang said it is not enough.

"The government subsidy only covers the school's facilities, but does not include the expenses of the faculty. And we cannot charge the parents because that would make it unaffordable for them," Tang said.

The school has more than 50 teachers; the wages alone cost 100,000 yuan ($16,090) per month. And the school did not buy social insurance for teachers until this year, after receiving a donation from a foundation.

"The money is enough to pay three years' social insurance for the teachers. But after that, I do not know where else to find that money."


【1】 【2】



We Recommend:

Your moment supports my whole life

Love makes us stay together forever

Chinese under the pressure

China sends patrol vessel to S. China Sea

Why ‘Chinese style road crossing’ occurs

Beijing witnesses 7th snowfall this winter

Survey: Chinese men more 'hasty' in love

China's weekly story (2012.12.21-12.27)

Revised traffic regulation takes effect in China

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:王欣、王金雪)

Related Reading

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Winter training in snow forest

  2. Weekly review of military photos

  3. Parade of 1,000 Polleras held

  4. Life is an education

  5. Smoggy weather engulfs large areas

  6. Some 3,000 job vacancies provided

  7. 1st individual user of grid-connected PV power

  8. Jay Chou promotes new album

  9. Lang Lang performs New Year Concert

  10. TCL puts name on Hollywood

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Drinking water safety is not a simple problem
  2. Japan's envisaged 'warning shots' dangerous
  3. When Chinese wives meet American mothers-in-law
  4. Will you leave a city because of cold?
  5. Labor system reform renders salute to Constitution
  6. China's yuan unlikely to appreciate sharply in 2013
  7. Good times gone?
  8. Salaries stifled amid sluggish exports
  9. China to surpass U.S. by 2049: report
  10. Proposed Beijing law seeks data on charities

What’s happening in China

China's social trust index declined further last year, according to the Annual Report on Social Mentality of China 2012

  1. Boosting migrants' education
  2. Healthy debate over Beijing's air quality
  3. Beijing air pollution reaches dangerous levels
  4. 5 dead, 19 injured in SW China coach accident
  5. Earthquakes blamed for fatal SW China landslide