Recently in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, a "global business elite junior MBA class" was founded in a middle school for students with successful parents, including a coal mine boss, the CEO of a food company and a real estate developer.
The annual school fee is 70,000 yuan ($10,250),
and the syllabus is uniquely designed, including ancient Chinese literature,
etiquette, physical education and cooking. The students are preparing to study
abroad, rather than take China's national college entrance
examination.
In this situation, education is like a product in a supermarket – one can
take away whatever one wishes from the shelves, and the only thing that matters
is money.
The year 2004 was once touted as witnessing "the end of China's myth of
industrializing education." Beihang University was caught charging 100,000 yuan
($14,643) for a certificate of education, a scandal that enraged the public.
Zhang Baoqing, then vice minister of education, said at the time that "the
Ministry of Education has been against the industrialization of education, which
will lead to the perishing of education."
The statement was interpreted by the media as a signal indicating "the
change of wind direction of China's educational reform." However, that change
didn't actually take place.
Since the 1990s, China's educational development has been essentially
guided by two principles – "development prioritized over reform" and "assessing
development purely from the financial perspective."
During this wave of utility-oriented development, schools tried every
possible means to expand their "educational business" – constructing more
buildings, enrolling more students and collecting extra fees. The founding of
the junior MBA class in Chengdu is just another way to generate greater
profits.
Under the domination of business logic and economic rhetoric, the due
rules and values of education have been missed. In other words, there's no
guarantee of educational fairness when the distribution of educational resources
is completely directed by the baton of the market.
One typical scene in China is that the second generation of the wealthy
may sit in a small class and enjoy elite teachers, whereas rural kids read
"Chinglish" loudly after a fresh college graduate. Some children in western
China don't even have the opportunity to receive basic education since they
cannot afford it.
With the widening gap between different social classes, the dualistic
structure of education in urban and rural areas or for rich and poor students
may become more divided.
The solution is to strengthen the governmental macro-control of education
and balance the distribution of resources.
More funds should be allocated to
schools in China's central and western regions, so that the students there won't
stare at a computer with wide eyes in this era of digital technology. State
grants and student loans should be appropriately enhanced so college fees will
not be impossibly expensive.
The industrialization of education has proven to be a joke, one that has
jeopardized educational fairness. Education is the greatest tool for achieving
social justice and it should be guaranteed to every member of society, not just
those with money.
Hangzhou Jiaoyu Science and Technology Co.LTD.
Copyright 2003-2024, All rights reserved