Education on AIDS to be compulsory (China Daily) Updated: 2004-06-15 22:00 AIDS prevention education is
set to become mandatory in Beijing.
A course for high school students will be taught beginning this autumn
semester and has been listed as mandatory.
The Beijing Municipal Commission of Education has also decided that primary
school students should begin the English language learning as early as the first
year in school.
The English classes are also scheduled to begin in the autumn semester in
September, local authorities said Tuesday.
Currently, students in primary schools do not have English classes until the
third year.
Junior middle schools in the capital city are required to arrange four hours
of classes on AIDS prevention on each of the three years of junior secondary
education.
Although some middle schools have already started AIDS prevention classes,
they were not mandatory and educational authorities had not set them as an
education requirement, an official with the Beijing Municipal Commission of
Education, who asked to be named Tang, said Tuesday.
Meanwhile, lessons to teach students how to keep away from narcotic drugs
will also start in primary schools this autumn.
Currently, junior middle school students attend drug prevention classes.
Language schools and schools ascertained as being qualified in some aspects
for language teaching will be permitted to start teaching a foreign language.
The first choice is usually English.
This is to meet demands for Beijing to host the 2008 Olympic Games and the
city's fast development, Tang explained.
There is more communication with overseas people in Beijing than other
Chinese cities, he pointed out.
Before the move involving all of the primary schools throughout the capital
city, the Haidian and Xuanwu districts and Yanqing County had already put
English classes in place in grade one but merely in experimental programmes for
selected students, Tang said.
He emphasized that this will not increase the burden of primary school
children.
To learn foreign languages earlier accords with educational practices, he
said Tuesday.
Students in early grades of primary schools will not be required to study
vocabulary or grammar, but mainly to focus on listening and speaking abilities,
Tang explained.
He said the hours for foreign language study will be less than Chinese so
that students' study of their native language will not be affected.
Actual hours for AIDS prevention classes, meanwhile, will be set by the
schools themselves.
The Beijing Municipal Commission of Education will not interfere.
Yang Ling, from the Beijing-based Yuetan Middle School, said Tuesday detailed
plans for AIDS prevention classes have not been drafted.
"But it is absolutely a good thing to do so," she said.
District and county-level education commissions will train schoolmasters on
managing English classes.
Districts and counties will have their own plans for English teaching, Tang
said.
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