Your current location:HOME >business >China Makes Remarkable Progress in Education in 2022 正文
TIME:2024-05-21 10:47:21 Source: Internet compilationEdit:business
Contact Us HomeNewsHighlightACWF NewsSocietyWom
[Photo Supplied by VCG] |
Officials of China's Ministry of Education (MOE) held a news conference, on March 23, to discuss the development of education in China during 2022. The officials explained, in 2022, China had 518,500 schools or academic institutions, of various types and at all levels, with a combined 293 million students and 18,803,600 full-time teachers. New entrants into the workforce had completed, on average, 14 years of formal education.
"In 2022, basic education made remarkable progress, which gave a strong boost to social equity and the well-rounded development of all people," Ma Jiabin, Deputy Director-General of MOE's Department of Basic Education, told reporters.
Compared with 2021, there were 245,700 affordable kindergartens in China, an increase of 1,033, and the gross enrollment rate of preschools — which covers the first three years of schooling before elementary school — was 89.7 percent, 1.6 percentage points higher than in the previous year. The children registered in affordable kindergartens accounted for 89.55 percent of registered preschoolers in China, an increase of 1.77 percent over the previous year.
Further, the completion rate of China's nine-year compulsory education reached 95.5 percent. There were 149,100 primary schools nationwide, with a combined 107 million registered students. There were 52,500 junior high schools, with a combined 51.206 million registered students. The gross enrollment rate of (regular and vocational) senior high schools was 91.6 percent.
In 2022, the central government allocated 60.5 billion yuan (US $8.64 billion) for basic education, Ma explained. Of that money, 23 billion yuan (US $3.29 billion) was allocated for the development of preschool education; 30 billion yuan (US $4.29 billion), for shoring up weak links in compulsory education; 7 billion yuan (US $1 billion), for improving the conditions of regular senior high schools; and, 500 million yuan (US $71.43 million), for special education.
Last year, China also made great strides in higher education. The gross enrollment rate of higher education reached 59.6 percent, 1.8 percentage points higher than in the previous year. The number of registered students, in all higher education institutions, totaled 46.55 million, an increase of 2.25 million over the previous year.
Liu Changya, Director-General of MOE's Department of Development Planning, believes China has built the largest higher-education system in the world, and that China should continue to improve the quality of its higher education. Liu says greater efforts should be made to train professionals, especially as such individuals are badly lacking in the fields of science, engineering, agriculture and medicine.
According to this year's Report on the Work of the Government, China will intensify efforts to develop vocational education. Lin Yu, Deputy Director-General of MOE's Department of Vocational and Adult Education, says MOE has coordinated the development of general and vocational education.
Now, there are 9,752 secondary-vocational schools (including technical schools) in China, and they enroll a combined 6,506,900 students (in 2022), accounting for 40.71 percent of the national enrollment rate at the upper-secondary level. There are 1,521 higher-vocational schools (including undergraduate programs for vocational education) in China, and they enroll a combined 5,466,100 students (in 2022), surpassing the enrollment rate of regular colleges and universities for the fourth consecutive year.
(Women of China English Monthly June 2023 issue)
32.3K
Please understand that womenofchina.cn,a non-profit, information-communication website, cannot reach every writer before using articles and images. For copyright issues, please contact us by emailing: [email protected]. The articles published and opinions expressed on this website represent the opinions of writers and are not necessarily shared by womenofchina.cn.
Burglar hurled stolen mobile phones at police from the top of 60ft high roof during nine2024-05-21 10:45
More videos of Kiwi hostage Philip Mehrtens in Papua warn against Indonesian military air strikes2024-05-21 10:22
Minister for Employment Louise Upston 'really feels' for public servants losing their jobs2024-05-21 10:14
Ministers to mark 75 years of NATO, discuss more support for Ukraine2024-05-21 10:05
Britain's new bonkers EV: Callum Skye is an £80k electric buggy built in Warwickshire2024-05-21 10:02
Donald Trump's hush2024-05-21 09:30
Judith Collins picks up raft of ministerial positions in new government2024-05-21 09:17
Teens arrested after petrol station, vape shop burglaries2024-05-21 09:05
Independent UN experts urge Yemen’s Houthis to free detained Baha'i followers2024-05-21 08:37
Biden takes on Trump over Russia, democracy in fiery State of the Union address2024-05-21 08:16
Mohammad Mokhber: Who is Iran’s acting president?2024-05-21 10:08
Alleged MediaWorks hack sees 2.5m Kiwis' data stolen2024-05-21 09:39
Hamilton mayor's Anzac trip to Belgium criticised amid massive rates rise2024-05-21 09:38
Coronavirus outbreak joins just five other public health emergencies from history2024-05-21 09:16
Philippines blames China for loss of giant clams in disputed shoal and urges environmental inquiry2024-05-21 09:15
Israel dismisses UN resolution on possible war crimes as 'distorted text'2024-05-21 09:03
Coronavirus news: American tries to slip through quarantine2024-05-21 09:01
Roads crack, flights grounded as rare earthquake hits US east coast2024-05-21 08:31
Supreme Court declines to hear challenge to Maryland ban on rifles known as assault weapons2024-05-21 08:15
Neighbours heard gunshots, 'commotion' in Auckland kidnapping2024-05-21 08:00