Title: Rural Education In China
1Rural Education In China
Challenges AND Opportunities
Rural China Education Foundation
2Do You Know the Numbers?
- Literacy in China has grown to near 99 (16-24
years old). (UNESCO, 2003) - 96 primary-to-secondary transition rate (China
Statistics Yearbook, 2004) - 70 of urban children enter high school, but
less than 10 of rural children - Among high school graduates, rural students have
3-4 times less chance to enter college than urban
students (quota system, worse preparation, more
pressure).
3Calculated based on data from China Statistics
Yearbook, 2004
4The ContextRural Development
- Urban population 492 million (38)Rural
population 800 million (62) (UNESCO, 2002/2003) - Income is gt3 times less than urban area (2003)
- Income of Urban Households 8,472
- Income of Rural Households 2,622 (China
Statistics Yearbook, 2004) - Top two v.s. bottom two provinces (2002)
- Shanghai 33,285, Beijing 22,577
- Guizhou 3,088, Guangxi 5,092
- Large inequalities a) between provinces b)
within provinces c) within communities
5Why Rural Development Is So Important
- China requires nine years of compulsory
education. Its funding comes from the local
government, thus depends on the economic
situation - Locales with a firmer socio-economic structure
are able to offer a better general learning
environment to the children - Inequalities in economic development directly
affect other education conditions of rural China
6Rural Education Conditions
- Significant tuition and book fees relative to
rural income - Decentralization many must live at school, pay
transport, rent and food - Economic incentive to find a job early
- Poorly trained teachers (often only high school
graduates themselves) - Large classes, poor facilities
- No larger learning environment, fewer
opportunities to learn outside of classroom - Strongly exam-centered, does not develop
students talents. More so in rural areas than in
cities - Competing with city students under same exam
system but with a different starting point
7Reform Efforts
- Government eliminate tuition book fees for
poorest students by 2007 and all students by
2010, give subsidies for living fees, offer
scholarships, build schools, ban unlicensed
teachers - Non-governmental organizations scholarships,
building schools, donate libraries and equipment - Overseas China Education Foundation, Zigen Fund,
Education and Science Society, Evergreen
Education Foundation, etc. - But also needed improving the quality of
education what to teach, why this, and how.
Supported by government (2001), but implemented
only at small scale.
8Whats Missing?
Severe lack of resources in rural education
- Hardware school buildings, facilities,
libraries, tuition fees
Government reforms, scholarships from
foundations, etc.
Economic support
- Software good teachers, effective teaching
methods, curriculum that is relevant to preparing
rural children for society
Human resources
RCEF?
9Rural China Education Foundation (RCEF)
- 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, registered in
the U.S. - Founded in 2004 by international Chinese students
and young professionals - Mission To improve the quality of education in
rural China in a way which benefits the
well-rounded development of students as well as
the development of their communities.
10RCEF Philosophy
11Teaching Methodology
- We used well-known teaching methods designed to
motivate students and help in effective learning - Encourage students to ask questions and to give
their own opinions. - Relate the topics of our classes to real-life
examples. - Emphasize understanding instead of
memorization. - Foster students creativity.
- Motivate students by making their learning
experiences enjoyable and memorable. - Let students work in groups when appropriate.
12What RCEF Brings to Rural China
- Student-centered teaching methods
- Curriculum created by RCEF with expert support
- Collaborations with mainland organizations
13RCEF Volunteer Teaching Program 2005
August 3
Evaluating
Feedback evaluations Publishing teaching
guidebook Future plans
14Left A typical rural classroom with desks in
rows where teaching is teacher-centered and
students have limited cooperation or participation
Right Ninth graders pass around a balloon in an
icebreaker game that encourages them to share
stories, dreams and concerns about school.
15BELOW A students poster about stories he
collected from interviewing adults in his village
as part of the Community Research class.
ABOVE Drawing maps and pictures of what students
observe on their way to school
16LEFT Art Projects-- Folding Paper
RIGHT Hands-on Science Experiments
17Middle school student comment I may not have
learned much knowledge but I gained a lot of
study strategies and principles I can use for a
lifetime. I was very happy and enjoyed these
eight days. I really wish time could stay still.
18How Is RCEF Unique?
- Focus on human resources, not on money
- Recruit expert knowledge in volunteers to
maximize effectiveness - Emphasize community concept of education
- Work closely with Chinese volunteers and
grassroots organizations - Focus on teaching content and methods, raise
social concern for the problems of quality
content and teaching methods - Introduce new subjects, such as drama, public
speaking, art - Promote overall development critical thinking,
creativity, team work, .. - Develop a Guidebook for Extracurricular Teaching
19Future plans
- Develop the volunteer teaching curriculum and
cultivate basis sites for community-centered
volunteering - Sponsor innovative rural education projects of
Chinese NGOs - Training rural teachers in student-centered
teaching methods and community-relevant
curriculum design - Locally-based quality curriculum development
projects. - 2005-7 Native Soil Education Program, with
Brooks Education Centre and Green Watershed in
Lashi County, Yunnan Province. - Newsletter for and by rural teachers
- Serve as an international platform to rural China
education organizations
20Where We Stand Now
Funds needed for
- Rural Teacher Training program
- Printing and distributing RCEFs Guidebook for
Extracurricular Teaching in Rural China - Local quality curriculum development programs
- Sponsoring innovative rural education projects
by Chinese volunteer organizations - RCEF Summer Volunteers are required to pay
for all their own expenses
2005 income came from our 3 Silver Sponsors
(1000 to 4999) and 13 Bronze Sponsors (100 to
999) in 2005
21What You Can Do for RCEF and Rural China Education
- Donations (www.ruralchina.org)
- Professional expertise in education, rural
development, sociology, China studies - Raising awareness join the RCEF Friends list
(send email to info_at_ruralchina.org) - Volunteering (Mandarin speaking required)
22Join us in developing quality education for rural
children!
WWW.RURALCHINA.ORG Contact INFO_at_RURALCHINA.ORG