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China expands compulsory education in rural areas
05/09/2002
Xinhua
The Chinese government will put 5 billion yuan (US$604.07 million)
before the end of 2005 into the second phase of its project to promote
compulsory education, to help students in rural areas have schooling,
Ministry of Education sources said in Beijing on May 9.
The project will cover 522 county-level places in 19 provinces
and regions in central and western parts of China, 462 of these
in the west. A total of 124 million people will benefit from the
project, among them 49 million of minority ethnic groups.
The project will also collect local funds totaling 2.25 billion
yuan, to build and renovate 9,800 primary and middle schools, train
467,000 teachers, and purchase 37,600 sets of equipment, 2.1 million
sets of desks and chairs and 24 million books.
The project will help more than 60,000 schools in rural areas set
up a computer system. Students from poverty-stricken families will
have textbooks free of charge or pay lower tuition fees.
As China continues its strategy to develop its west, 91.8 percent
of the project's funds will flow into those western areas being
developed.
The promotion of compulsory education in rural areas, initiated
in 1996, is the largest educational project launched in the country
since 1949 when New China was founded. By the end of 2000, the first
phase of the project had cost a total of 12.5 billion yuan, involving
852 county-level places in 22 provinces and regions and 255 million
people.
So far, enrollment rates for primary and junior high schools in
central China have risen to 99 percent and 91 percent respectively,
from an original 97 percent and 77 percent. Among 469 county-level
units in west China, 242 have popularized primary education, and
164 have popularized nine-year primary and junior high schooling.
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