AFFIRMATIVE REACTION

来源 :汉语世界(The World of Chinese) | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:epaiai009
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  ADMISSIONS CONTROVERSY SPARKS DEBATE ON “FAIRNESS” FOR RURAL STUDENTS
  When a student surnamed Zhao from Xincai county, Henan, became the first in his village accepted to Peking University, his grandfather only knew that it was a good school. His parents weren’t home; they were working in Guangzhou as waste sorters.
  “We haven’t had a college student in years,” a neighbor of Zhao’s told the China Economic Times.
  Yet for several days in August, Zhao and his quiet village became the center of a showdown over China’s version of “affirmative action,” after PKU asked provincial education authorities to allow them to rescind Zhao and another Henan student’s admission offers on the premise that they might “have trouble completing their studies.”
  The two students were enrolled through the National Special Education Program, a government initiative started in 2012 that offered special exemptions for students in 680 economically disadvantaged counties to attend the nation’s top-tier universities even if they do not meet the minimum scores for admission in the national college entrance exam (gaokao).
  Under this program, PKU set aside spots for eight science-track high school graduates from Henan province. Zhao and the other student scored over 100 points lower than other admitted students from their province that year.
  Criticism of PKU’s actions erupted on Weibo, becoming a trending topic on the microblogging platform nearly overnight. With graduation rates a notoriously high 95 percent even at selective four-year institutions, netizens argued that the university was more likely motivated by elitism than by genuine concern for the students’ ability to keep up.
  Geography-based discrimination is nothing new in Chinese education. Though the sole criterion for university admissions in China is the gaokao, a standardized test, public universities hold quotas for local students. In practice, this means that students with residence permits in cities with prestigious universities, like Beijing, have a lower bar for admission compared to non-local students, in addition to better educational resources.
  In 2015 it was widely reported that the acceptance rate for government-classified “first-tier universities” was 24 percent in Beijing, and just 9 percent for students from Jiangsu province, although the academic caliber of students from the two highly developed areas are considered similar. The New York Times reported in 2014 that a Beijing student is 41 times more likely to gain admission to PKU than a student in the less-developed Anhui province.
  Even so, recent government efforts to equalize university admissions have received vocal pushback. In 2016, universities in 11 more affluent provinces reduced quotas for locals to accept more students from 10 poorer provinces. When Jiangsu province announced that it would reallocate 38,000 seats, signifying an 18 percent reduction in spots reserved for local students, over 1,000 parents took to the streets with signs calling (perhaps ironically) for “Fairness in Education!”
  Following a public relations nightmare, PKU reenrolled the two Henan students and issued a public apology on Weibo. However, as long as university rankings continue to influence job placements and social mobility, China has a long way to go to achieve education meritocracy.
其他文献
photography by Xin Ting (辛挺)  text by Hatty Liu  Curl up with a good book—anywhere  若能體会手不释卷的快乐,  世间何处不可读书?  Homeless intellectual” Shen Wei, the well-read Shanghai vagrant who shot to online fame in
期刊
Long the exclusive domain of elderly gossips, neighborhood committees are looking to recruit new blood—but can they offer what millennials need?  居委會需要新鲜血液,可是这看似平淡的工作能吸引想法各异的年轻人吗?  Everyone who comes
期刊
A  fter Mr. Lou moved in, the apartment was full.  The east-facing room, where a couple named Duan lived, was the largest. The wife was pregnant. Duan kept saying he was going to move out, that the en
期刊
BY Huang Sizhuo (黃思卓)  The sky’s the limit for an ancient hemorrhoid cure  “跨界网红”马应龙:传承四百年的回民中药老字号  The person who created this stuff should receive a Nobel Prize, an exemption from China’s one-child
期刊
In northeast Yanbian, football, poetry, and patriarchy preserve a unique Chinese-Korean culture  延邊风情:探索当代朝鲜族的别样生活  The moment I stepped off the plane at Yanji airport in northeast China, pictures of
期刊
Performance and video artist Qi Yafei held a solo exhibition in Berlin’s Migrant Bird Space from April 20 to June 7, coinciding with her tenure as an artist-in-residence at the Federal Foreign Office
期刊
By SUN JIAHUI (孙佳慧)  A generation recalls the life-changing college entrance exam held right after the Cultural Revolution  1977年,中断了十一年的高考在冬天恢复,无数学子的命运从此改变  For most Chinese, the national college ent
期刊
BY Emily Conrad  Ultra-marathon enthusiast Bai Bin recounts his 433-day run from the South to the North Pole  他用433天,從南极跑到北极  When ultra-marathon runner Bai Bin was dragged into a car at gunpoint near
期刊
by Tan Yunfei (谭云飞)  A summer snack with a surprisingly short history  夏天怎么能少了麻小配啤酒?  Last July, 100,000 cooked crayfish from Hubei province boarded the Sino-Euro Railway and landed in Russia for the
期刊
A reduced prison term given to a convicted rapist in Jiangxi province in August has created public backlash over Chinese courts mitigating punishments based on “forgiveness.”  Though rape is punishabl
期刊