In recent months, Chinese President Xi Jinping has called the Chinese tutoring industry "a stubborn malady" and taken the rather astonishing (to me) step of banning for-profit after-school tutoring in core school subjects, and all tuition on weekends, public holidays and school vacations. Nor is this simply a corporate matter - to prevent enterprising individual teachers filling the gap, President Xi has also decreed that teachers found engaging in private tutoring will be fired and have their licences revoked.
These decisions have made headlines for economic reasons - China's tuition industry was worth US$120 billion, has (until now) attracted huge interest and inward investment from private equity firms, and has now seen major losses following the announcement. But for me the real interest is in reflecting how education is seen, and valued, and what it tells us about the educational aspect of the social contract. This is at heart an ideological matter, not a financial one – that reflects a vision of society and how it should be set up.
There seem to be three fundamental drivers behind the Chinese decision; and various Singaporean journalists have commented on each of them:
- Wellbeing:“China's annual legislative and political meetings known as the "Two Sessions" earlier this month… raised concerns that seven-days-a-week extracurricular classes hurt children's physical and mental health”
- Competition: "Chinese parents feel intense pressure to provide the best resources to their children, who in turn must work extra hard to keep up in an educational rat race….The term often used to describe this situation in China's education is "neijuan" 内卷 or involution, which means "inside rolling", a process of incessant competition from which no one benefits.”
- Equity:Because the wealthy can afford more, “The tuition industry is part of a system that undermines commitment to a meritocratic society, which assumes a level educational playing field where all students are given an equal chance to succeed”
We should examine the overall effect of widespread tuition, not just the benefit to individual attainment. source |
Singaporean authors Ng Shi Wen and Gerard Sasges call for us not to follow the Chinese state-directed way, but to open a broader conversation about what we want for our children; to find a way to increase the overall good without recourse to the blunt instruments of regulation: The time is right to reflect on the role of the tuition industry and its role in creating Singaporeans and a Singapore able to face an uncertain future with confidence. Real change is possible. China can do it. And we can, too.
As part of this, as we start the academic year, if we're considering tuition, let's consider three categories in addition to the obvious one of can I help my child academically?
- Wellbeing: What's the overall effect of tuition? Does it squeeze our space for sports, or socialising? Might it lead to burnout?
- Competition: Is the motivation more about competing with others than about deepening understanding? What might this to our children's sense of self, sense of perfectionism, and ability to be kind to themselves?
- Equity: If we are lucky enough to be able to readily afford tuition, are there ways to assist others so that we can share our the fruits of our good fortune and hard work?
Further Thoughts on Tuition in Singapore
- What to think about if you are considering it.
- Why tuition can be a bad thing for your child.
- What parental involvement can look like instead of or in additional to tuition
- Tuition and Motivation
Reference
- n. a. (2021) China to bar for-profit tutoring in core school subjects Straits Times, Singapore. July 23
- Ding Jie, Huang Huizhao and Denise Jia (2021) What’s Behind China’s move? Straits Times, Singapore. March 3
- Koetse, M. (2021) The Concept of ‘Involution’ (Nèijuǎn) on Chinese Social Media. What's on Weibo
- Hardin, G (1968) The Tragedy of the Commons Science 13 Dec 1968
- Ho, G. (2021)Ban tuition? It's not so easy Straits Times
- Ng Shi Wen and Gerard Sasges (2021) China cracking down on private tuition: A lesson for Singapore? Straits Times, Singapore. August 6
Thank you for sharing your insights on Tuition, this is very helpful.
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