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北京大学工学院 PKU College of Engineering Globex China’s Economy: Growth and Global Connections July 2015 Education Susan Mays, Ph.D., contact [email protected] Globex Faculty Fellow, Peking University; Faculty, The University of Texas at Austin Outline of today’s discussion Education Sector Size and Reform in China Financing of the System Exams: Hardest-Working Students on Earth?...China’s Exam-Oriented System Quality of Education for a 21st Century Workforce and Globalization 2 I Education Reform and Growth 1949-2014: Expansion in Education & Attainment, New Policies Since 1949, increase in adult literacy from overall 20% to now 99% of younger adults by massive expansion of enrollment and adult literacy programs Also, changes in educational philosophy, “modern” education, and funding Reforms are in financing, management hierarchy, curriculum & teaching, and other areas 4 CONFIDENTIAL Rounds of reform increase access, focus, and quality From 1978: Reversing CR policies; education reforms part of broader reforms Before 1980s, public and school finance characterized by a centralized system Since 1985, reforms have oscillated between de-centralization and re-centralization 1985 Reforms: Decentralization of finances and management Diversification in the mobilization of educational resources Increasing vocational and technical education Increasing the number and quality of teachers 1986 Law of Compulsory Education [9 years]: Article 10: “The State shall not charge tuition for students receiving compulsory education. The State shall establish a system of grants-in-aid to support the school attendance of poor students.” 5 CONFIDENTIAL The most recent reforms focus on technical and S&T education 1993 “Program for Chinas Educational Reform and Development”: Increase focus on human resource development Encouraged establishment of community-sponsored schools Allow groups/individuals to operate schools, within context of laws and regulations 2006 The Real, Free “Compulsory Education” of 9 years across China Greatly decreased regional disparity Yet, tuition and relationships affect school options, even in compulsory middle school 2014: New Policies to Enhance Technical and Vocational Education (high and lower levels) 6 CONFIDENTIAL Growth of secondary enrollment to over 81% by 2011 and gender gap closing rence High schools: public, private, vocational, adult continue edu, technology schools, etc. .8 .7 .6 .5 .4 .3 Gross .2 Male .1 Female 1970 1974 1972 1978 1976 1982 1980 1986 1984 1990 1988 1994 1992 1998 1996 2002 2000 Fig. 2 Secondar y Enrollment Rate Big increase in enrollment with “national enrollment expansion policy” in 1998 Sources: China Statistical Yearbook 7 Growth of post-secondary enrollment, with quality concerns Enrollment in Postsecondary Institutions (1,000s) 8 II Who is Paying for It? The Financing of the System Financing the system… Different Types of Schools Have Different Funding Structures The “Great Leap Forward” in Higher Education in 1998; Tuition; Types of $$ Aid Financial Inequity in Compulsory Level 10 III The Exam-Oriented System Financing of Migrants’ Education, Emphasize on Vocational Education Types of Schools and Funding Funding Types of Schools “People-run” Government Government Traditional government schools Private People-run government assisted schools People-run school affiliated with government schools People-run school owned by government People (community) Private (individual/group) Government-run people assisted school Stand-alone people-run schools Rural people-run schools Government-run privately assisted school Traditional private schools School choices: fluctuating options Demand for increased school choices: • • • 1949 – 1978: no private schools 1980s: passive tolerance of private schools 1990s: state sanctioned private schools, more strict licensing 2000s: more openness for private schools • • • • More tolerant political environment Increasing family income Large disparities in quality between schools One-child policy in urban areas • Educational Funding: Size and Sources Percent of GDP 14% on Education 18.5% 61% 6.5% 1978 Funding Sources from the 2000s Government Businesses and individuals Tuition from students Other Different funding sources can cause affordability and equity issues Global average: 4.9% Developed: 5.1% Under-developed: 4.1% China: recently ~ 4% Sources: China Statistical Yearbook, China Educational Finance Statistical Yearbook, Yao Zhang, Minds Abroad calculation. 12 2012 1998 “Great Leap Forward” in higher education…and tuition Growth in university student population is based on: • Cost-sharing between the government and students/families • High demand resulting in more private colleges Limited financial aid and loan sources now lead to affordability and equity issues 2012-2013 Urban household income/yr ~Y30,000 Rural household income/yr ~Y9,000 Estimate of (college tuition + dorm)/yr ~Y5,000 College Exp./Annual Household Income Urban 17% Rural 56% 13 Financial inequity at the compulsory level, years 1-9 Ex: Urban vs Rural Per-student Spending Gap Total spending Urban RMB1062 Rural RMB576 Ratio Urban is 1.84x Rural Labor migration: • Children left behind at home with aged, illiterate grandparents • School-age children live with parents in cities, but lack adequate schools • 2008 policy for central gov funding to subsidize migrant kids in public city schools, status? “Inequity is the largest problem facing Chinese education. We should provide more opportunities for especially the disadvantaged children to iliminate further inequality. ” - Premier Wen Jiabao (2002-2012) 14 Initial funds for migrant education emphasized vocational training Funding VT schools can improve: • Equity Issues • Social Cohesion and Stability • Economic Value (add skilled labor) Three Types of VT Schools: • Upper secondary vocational schools: - Funded by local tax revenue and run by education bureaucracies 15 • Skilled-workers schools: - Funded by national tax revenue and run by the Ministry of Labor and its local affiliates • Secondary (specialized) teacher-trng schools: - Most joint funded by local governments, business & other stakeholders, run by edu bureaucracies III The Exam-Oriented System From Confucius to 2014: honoring teachers and taking exams Confucius ~500BC, Zhou Dynasty, The Analects of Confucius: “三人行,必有我师” (If 3 walk together, there is always someone to learn from, sān rén xíng , bì yǒu wǒ shī) Confucianism Ideologies and Conventions: “一日为师,终身为父” (Be my teacher for a day, be my teacher (father) for a lifetime, yī rì wéi shī , zhōng shēn wéi fù) 605-1905 AD: The Imperial Examination: select civil servants, golden route for up mobility 1368-1644 AD: Ming Dynasty, the 8-Part Essay, 八股文: “万般皆下品,唯有读书高” (To be a scholar is to be the top of society) 1978: Reestablishment of “高考”(College Entrance Exam), representing the formalization of education and teaching Today: Exam-Oriented School System and Exam-Dominated Society: •Entrance Exams: primary > secondary > college > grad school •Proficiency/Graduate Tests: TOIEC, IELTS, TOEFL, GRE, LSAT, etc. Professional Certificate: Civil servant test, teaching certificate, nurse license, etc. 17 Curriculum reforms by MOE in 2005 sought to increase and emphasize comprehensive qualifications over test scores Based on 2002’s Notice about Implementation of Basic Education Evaluation and Testing System Reform Experimental districts in 2004: 17 pilot districts in China Junior High School Achievement Test • The final test for compulsory education • Qualification for graduation • One of the criteria for senior high admission Senior High School Admission Test Test Reform Curriculum Reform Comprehensive Evaluation Goals of the Reform • Emphasis: comprehensive evaluation and student-centered teaching •Reduce the number of tested subjects • Focus on ability to analyze and apply knowledge • Diversify the test methods and define test procedures • Standardize the grading and pass-fail requirements 18 Admission Reform IV Edu Quality: Creating a 21stc Workforce for Globalization Improving the Quality of Education: Strategies and Issues 20 In Primary and Secondary: Promote Students’ “综合素质” (Comprehensive Qualification) - “moral character, civic-mindedness, learning ability, communication and cooperation, exercise and health, aesthetics and expression” - problems in quantifiable and fair evaluations - …corruption in admission In Higher Education: universities competing for better students and faculty - Adoption of international ranking system, to attract the best students nationwide -Strong graduates on the labor market and strong alumni - Using the ranking system to guide faculty evaluations created problems -Pressure to publish increased plagarism rate -Positive & negative effects on teaching: more exposure to frontier research but less time for teaching - Adopting career counseling and other student services…ramping up - Converting 600 universities to “polytechnic” universities, announced 2014 From 2014, S&T Focus: State Council's "Decisions on Advancing the Development of Modern Vocational Education” Vocational education is key to the economy, must be upgraded Gaokao changes to allow bridging between vocational students and general college students (how?) III Enterprises and industry associations involved in running vocational schools - Partnerships between vocational schools and employers; employers involved in course design, teaching methods, internships, and recruiting - Mgmt boards of vocational schools should be less government-oriented and have multiple stakeholders Government will fund investments in vocational education to ensure that the above transitions can occur 21 China’s number of students studying abroad has increased dramatically, especially high school and undergrad students III The Exam-Oriented System 22