About 200,000 young people in rural areas are expected to
benefit over the next five years from an unprecedented education
plan that should bring new access to higher education into the
nation's villages.
Education officials on Friday launched the program named
"one college student in one village."
It will adopt modern means of distance education to bring
courses to some of the poorest students in China.
Courses to be offered range from information technology to
agricultural techniques.
The Central Radio and
Television University will play a main role in implementing the
plan, officials said. The university, together with similar
universities at all levels, will make up a distance education
network across the vast most-populated nation on the planet.
The need for well-educated people is more and more urgent in the
villages, especially those in the western regions, said Vice
Minister of Education Wu Qidi.
However, very few students from rural areas return to their
hometowns after graduating from universities, she said.
Wu indicated the plan is designed to nurture people who can stay
where they live after receiving their higher education and thereby
contribute to the local development of their communities.
The plan will be implemented in 100 counties in the western
regions at first on a trial basis. The first recruitment will start
in July.
Farmers who have received education in high schools and village
heads are encouraged to sign up for the program. Applicants need to
pass a specially-designed entrance exam, officials said.
Once recruited, farmers do not need to quit their daily jobs.
They can study by themselves, through television and radio, with
occasional group study sessions organized in county and township
educational centers.
Those who finish courses and pass final exams will obtain a
degree.
Plans now call for one student to be recruited in every village
each year, although there are no actual strict restrictions on the
number of people recruited, Wu said.
Despite high expectations by education officials, some farmers
interviewed are a bit reluctant.
"Well, I do not think it an attractive idea to receive such an
education," said Bian Xingkuan, a resident in the Cunyi Village of
the Liugu Township in Fuping County of northwest China's Shaanxi
Province.
Bian was a teacher in village primary school and he now makes a
living in the Fuping County by carrying passengers using a
tricycle.
"Were I 10 years younger, I might apply for it," said Bian, who
is now in his forties.
Most farmers do not have extra money to pay for tuition fees, he
said. And since studying for a degree does not bring them immediate
income, few will be willing to take the time to study, he said.
Even though some could receive the education and get a degree,
Bian doubts many would stay at their villages.
"Of course, the government's idea is good in theory," he
added.
Ge Daokai, deputy head of the Ministry of Education's Higher
Education Department, admitted there might be farmers who are not
willing to spend money on education.
But he said the situation varies from area to area.
"The aim of the plan is to offer opportunities to farmers who
failed to go to universities to gain access to higher education,"
he said. "After all, the plan is only experimental and there is
space for future improvement."
According to Yu Yunxiu, vice president of the Central Radio and
Television University, tuition fees will be minimal to lessen the
burden on students.
Wu said the ministry welcomes people and organizations from all
walks of life to offer funds for the plan.
The university will invest 20 million yuan (US$2.4 million) in
upgrading teaching facilities in county-level radio and television
universities in 100 western counties to make the program feasible,
Yu said.
(China Daily February 21, 2004)