Text: | Print|

Pressurized preschoolers(2)

2015-03-23 09:33 Global Times Web Editor: Qian Ruisha
1

Primary schools, inundated with students that have already learnt the basics of their curriculum, often skip big chunks of it that have been rendered superfluous.

Li Hong, a mother of a 6-year-old girl in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province, said that she is glad that her daughter learnt some English in kindergarten.

"The [primary] school didn't bother teaching the English alphabet after the teachers found out that almost all of the kids knew it already," Li told the Global Times.

Flourishing training institutes

There are numerous education training institutes for preschoolers in Beijing. Some of institutes contacted by the Global Times claimed that they were fully booked for the next month.

An instructor with a training agency located in Fengtai district, surnamed Ye, said that their teachers also teach in public kindergartens across Beijing.

"Our textbooks summarize the math, English and Chinese that are taught in the first two years of primary school, and are specially designed for preschoolers," she said.

The agency teaches 5-year-old preschoolers conversational English, Chinese poems, and mathematical problems involving numbers smaller than 10 during the first semester, and then expands the calculations to involve numbers larger than 10 but smaller than 100 during the second semester, according to Ye.

Besides academic classes, agencies also offer dance, calligraphy, taekwondo and drawing lessons. Beijing agencies charge 2,000 yuan to 6,000 yuan for three-month academic courses, not including optional classes.

Preschool educational services in China have an enormous client base, and in some popular fields like English, the market's growth rate could reach 20 percent per year, according to the Xinhua News Agency. China has about 180 million children under the age of 8 and more than 20 million babies are born annually.

In Beijing, where there are more children than places at kindergartens, some parents have no choice but to send their kids to private preschool training agencies instead - if they can afford it.

Currently, private preschool training institutes are not regulated in China and most of the employees at the institutes are not professionally trained. Some agencies even teach courses to preschoolers that have been abandoned in foreign countries, Liu Yan, a preschool education professor with Beijing Normal University, told the China Education Daily.

Education system reform

The fundamental reason behind the immense pressure put on preschoolers is the country's exam-oriented education system, experts said.

"If primary school enrollment exams are not abolished, the phenomenon of kindergartens placing heavy academic burdens on students cannot disappear," said Chu Zhaohui, a research fellow with the National Institute of Educational Sciences.

Students are usually asked to solve math problems involving numbers smaller than 20, read Chinese poems and the English alphabet during the primary school enrollment interviews.

In Beijing, some kindergartens have figured out ways to get around the inspection. A kindergarten headmaster said that they won't stop teaching a primary school curriculum, "but once the inspection team arrives, we'll remove all the textbooks and tell the children to say they learnt nothing," the headmaster was quoted by China National Radio as saying.

Forcing children to do too much academic work too early affects the development of children's imagination and intelligence, Chu said.

Some children find the first grade curriculum too easy because they have learnt the material before, but suddenly fall behind when they start to learn new stuff in the second grade, experts said.

Western countries like the US had the same problem in the early 1960s, but after years of research, they found that this kind of pressure does more harm than good to kids. After this, the US stopped teaching primary school level materials to preschoolers, according to Chu.

Comments (0)
Most popular in 24h
  Archived Content
Media partners:

Copyright ©1999-2018 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.