Electronic enrollment fees, desk-and-chair fees, residence
archive fees, night study fees, bicycle-keeping fees, school
construction fees, thesis tutorship fees.
The fee name game can be endless, as long as a school wants to
levy charges beyond tuition and the charges permitted by the State
and provincial price supervisors.
"Illegal charges are still rampant and going on in all kinds of
forms," Li Lei, director of the price supervision and inspection
department of the National Development and Reform Commission, said
yesterday in Beijing.
From September to November, the commission, together with a
number of ministry-level institutions, launched a nationwide
inspection of illegal charges in schools.
Initial inspection of more than 60,000 colleges, schools and
educational departments in 20 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities discovered 21.4 billion yuan (US$2.6 billion) of
illegal charges in more than 12,000 cases.
The commission publicized the names of the top-10 schools on the
blacklist, including colleges or middle schools in Beijing, Hebei,
Inner Mongolia, Heilongjiang, Jiangsu, Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei,
Guangxi and Chongqing.
Those schools either charged for items themselves, overcharged
for existing items or kept requiring forbidden fees for enrollment,
examinations and other services.
A common practice found is to charge so-called sponsorship fees
from a student whose scores in entrance examination are too low to
qualify.
A school, for example, asked more than 100 unqualified students
to "donate" a computer worth more than 10,000 yuan (US$1,200) in
order to be admitted, Li said.
To tackle illegal operations like this, the price supervisory
authority will launch more inspections in schools where students
complain.
A hotline (set up at 12358) is available for all local people to
complain to price supervisors.
(China Daily December 17, 2003)