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Comparisons of Education in China and England

Educational Pressure

Based on my knowledge of the past education system, China has remained a highly competitive education system. In 1986 the Chinese government passed a compulsory nine year education law (Ncess.org, 2014). Throughout China grades and exams solely determine student ability and achievement. This begins in junior secondary where pupils must sit and pass a compulsory entrance exam to continue education at senior secondary school. Students who fail this exam have an option to continue vocational study or enter employment.    

In England, The Education Act 1870 introduced compulsory education for children aged 5 to 13. Throughout England, students undergo assessments and exams but the results do not determine student’s intellectual ability, Pritchard (2009). Instead schools in England take a child centred approach, they aim to meet holistic needs. This links to Humanistic Phycologist Abraham Maslow’s ‘Hierarchy of Needs’, Benson (2014) as schools aim to meet basic needs such as food, water as one can potentially achieve self-actualization. (Woolfolk et al, 2008. 442).

In China at the end of senior secondary schools over 10 million students prepare for the Goakoa exam, students must pass to ensure their place in college. Martin (2013) states, the Goakoa college admission system pays no attention to extra-curricular work, only your score on a single test. It places students on a career path they will follow for the rest their life. I feel this exam result can send a child to the factory floor or to the top levels of China’s booming economy.

Studies show students in China undergo immense pressure during the Goakoa exams, it has led to study habits like attaching IV patches for a flow of amino acids while reading. (Ncess.org, 2014).

Research shows children’s parents who are activity engaged in their education are likely to succeed Harris (2007). Studies show in England few parents play an active role in the education of their child. I feel this is because of social class, there is a significant gap between rich and poor. As richer parents aspire their child to study while poorer children enter employment to support household income. This has significantly affected enrollment rates as only 40% of students enter tertiary education. (Comparative Study Link)

My primary research reveals that suicide is the leading cause of young adult death in China it has attributed to mental stress, “500 students commit suicide each year under academic pressure”. (Ncess.org, 2014). Consequently, Chinese students no longer wish to study “School is hard; I want to be a footballer but my parents do not let me play they feel it will distract my learning”- Jigansu 13 years old school boy. (Pearsonfoundation.org, 2014). In contrast children in English schools “I enjoy school because I learn and play with my friends” Jack 12 year’s old school boy. (Salford.ac.uk, 2014).

Based on my evidence I feel China’s education system places pressure on students.  The examination based system has led to learning facts, not questioning the facts, it has eliminated creativity in education. I feel China could improve its education system by taking the child centered approach in education. Chinese students could start with collaborative study giving opportunity to question.

 

By Sarah Khan

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