The amended Compulsory Education Law, which comes into effect in
China Friday contains a new provision that ensures the right to
education for children of migrant workers no matter where they
live.
The provision stipulates that when both parents or legal
guardians are migrant workers living and working with their
children in locations other than where the family is registered,
local governments where they live and work must provide for the
child's education.
By the end of 2004, more than 6.4 million rural children of
compulsory education age were living in cities with their parents.
Another 22 million rural children remain in their rural homes,
while their parents worked in cities, according to the Ministry of
Education.
Children who were brought to cities by their migrant parents are
often charged school fees that are much higher than those charged
by schools in rural areas. Yet the likelihood that these children
will move often makes it difficult for some cities to meet the
demand.
Numerous private schools for migrant children have been
established to migrant children in cities and they have been
constantly attacked for being ill equipped, lacking infrastructure
and qualified teachers to guarantee quality of education.
The Compulsory Education Law was promulgated in 1986 and the
revised Compulsory Education Law aims to give children in both
cities and the countryside nine years of free compulsory
education.
(Xinhua News Agency September 1, 2006)