Monday, 6 May 2013

2 Chinese Teenagers Commits Suicide Over Unfinished Homework Assignments

In an extreme case highlighting the immense pressure schoolchildren
can face, two teens in eastern China committed suicide after failing
to complete homework assignments.

In a highly competitive education system that emphasises rote learning
and passing exams, Chinese students spend on average 8.6 hours a day
in class and can expect several more hours of assignments afterwards.

State-owned media confirmed today that a 15-year-old boy in Nanjing,
the capital of Jiangsu province, who failed to finish homework from a
three-day public holiday jumped to his death around 11:00 am on
Thursday, the China Daily said.

A 13-year-old boy in the same town got up at 4:00 am Thursday to
complete holiday assignments but was found hanged on a staircase at
his home two hours later, it reported.

"In a suicide note, the boy said he loved his parents, felt sorry for
them and hoped they could bring lilies, his favourite flower, to his
grave," it read.

China has made impressive progress in rolling out universal education
across the country, and according to the United Nations has a youth
literacy rate of 99 percent. But many parents complain about the
emphasis on rote memorisation and tests and the rigid teaching style.

Some students spend as much as 12 hours in the classroom each day, a
2007 survey by China's Youth and Children Research Centre reported.
They can typically expect several hours of homework on top of that.

Xiong Bingqi, deputy director of the Beijing-based 21st Century
Education Research Institute, told the China Daily that: "Test scores
are still an important evaluation, or the only evaluation, for a
student to get admitted to college. Therefore it's natural for
teachers to leave heavy homework assignments," he said.

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