Redian新闻
>
Deadly School Stampede Renews Calls For Scheduling Reform

Deadly School Stampede Renews Calls For Scheduling Reform

社会

After one student died and five others were injured in a rush to the bathroom, Chinese are once again calling for schools to rethink their short, tightly controlled break periods.

A deadly break period stampede at a middle school in central China killed one student and injured five others this week, bringing renewed scrutiny to China’s overpacked, tightly managed class schedules.

The stampede took place Monday at Xinghua Middle School in Wuzhi County, Henan province, as 7th and 8th graders rushed to the bathroom between midterm exams, according to an incident report issued by the Wuzhi County government. One student died in the crush, while another was reported to be in critical condition. Four more students were hospitalized with minor injuries.

Staff at Wuzhi No. 2 People’s Hospital declined Sixth Tone’s request for comment Wednesday. A staff member at Wuzhi County People’s Hospital referred questions about the injured students to the county’s publicity authorities.

Wang Liyong, a representative of Wuzhi County’s publicity department, told Sixth Tone the cause of the incident is still under investigation, and that it was the first such stampede at one of the county’s schools. He declined to provide information about the status of the injured students.

In its incident report, the county said it would conduct a full investigation into the stampede and would “deal with the relevant responsible parties seriously, in accordance with the law.” It also promised to carry out a comprehensive effort to identify and address hidden risks in its schools.

In the meantime, the stampede has resurfaced a perennial topic in Chinese media: overstretched students and insufficient class breaks.

These problems received widespread attention in late October, after a video of a teacher complaining that her students spent recess indoors went viral on Chinese social media. A related hashtag, “Elementary and middle school students barely have time to use the toilet,” has been viewed 270 million times.

Quiet breaks, in which students are kept indoors and under watch between classes, are a longstanding issue in Chinese educational circles. In a 2019 survey by China Youth Daily, three-quarters of parents said quiet breaks were common practice at their kids’ schools.

Although the country’s education authorities have made reducing student workloads a priority in recent years, schools have been slow to adapt, citing the risk of injury and parental concerns as reasons for keeping students at their desks.

In part, the problem is due to many schools’ unreasonable approach to student safety, says Chu Zhaohui, a researcher at the China National Academy of Educational Sciences.

“In many cases, front-line teachers don’t have the authority needed to handle the responsibilities they’re saddled with,” Chu told Sixth Tone Wednesday. “Their responsibilities and rights are inconsistent, so there is no other solution except strict controls (on students).”

Many teachers believe not letting students leave the classroom is the simplest way to manage their safety, Chu added.

As for the stampede, Chu said a thorough investigation is needed, but if local authorities simply fire someone to calm down public opinion, it could end up compounding the recess problem.

“A fair, complete, and in-depth investigation must be conducted into this incident,” Chu said. “But it’s important to avoid handling it according to the ‘stability-maintenance’ playbook.”

(Header image: The entrance to Xinghua Middle School in Wuzhi County, Henan province. From Weibo)

Download the new Sixth Tone app at the App Store or Google Play
APK file for Android:
https://image4.sixthtone.com/pkg/sixthtone.apk
(Copy URL and open in browser)

微信扫码关注该文公众号作者

戳这里提交新闻线索和高质量文章给我们。
相关阅读
New Dam in NW China Aims to Restore Flow to Parched Heihe River鹧鸪天 为我病重的二姐祷告Experts Warn Against New Fad in Chinese Schools — Nasal Sticks纽约州-Poly Prep Country Day School 波利预科走读学校时间的秘密:Gradually, then Suddenly.Old Markets, New Appeal: Young Chinese Rediscover Wet MarketsWukang Mansion: Shanghai’s ‘Pearl’ Before Its Online FameHeilongjiang Gymnasium Collapse Kills 3 Middle School StudentsOlympic Stage Set, Young Chinese Dance to the Breaking BeatChina’s New Public Academic Platform Takes on Industry GiantsThe Bookstore Giving Shanghai’s Women a Room of Their OwnProviding Long-Term Care for Shanghai’s Most Vulnerable Resident笼子真格天使项目「CreativeFitting」获数百万美元Pre-A轮融资|Z NewsGirls’ Education Biopic Catches Heat for Female DepictionYoung Chinese Embrace Budget-Friendly Elderly Universities"妈妈让我来自首",7岁男孩在派出所写下"bǎozhèng书"胡夫金字塔之谜康州-Kingswood Oxford School 金斯伍德牛津学校Preparing for the 2023 Tax Year: Ensuring a Strong Tax Saving?High school grad rejected by 16 colleges hired by GoogleFuchsia Dunlop on the Past, Present, and Future of Chinese Food[9月26日]科学历史上的今天——金·赫尔尼(Jean Amédée Hoerni)加州-Pinewood School 松木学校After Dog Mauls Child, Chinese Cities Push to Tighten Pet LawsAt China Expo, a Next-Gen Prosthetic Knee Offers New Hope美国托尼老师成长记As Cyberbullying Persists, China Seeks Remedies in Law and Tech麻省-Buckingham Browne and Nichols School白金汉宫尼古拉斯学校How Guangdong Pioneered Chinese Photography【惠宜教育2023美高招生讲座】圣斯蒂芬教会学校 St. Stephen's Episcopal School TXSo long iPhone. Generative AI needs a new device | 商论双语新泽西-Dwight-Englewood School 德怀特-英吉利伍德学校专访丨积家CEO Catherine Rénier:情感联结和艺术表达对腕表也至关重要夏婳:两情难相知(五)The ONLY offline Job Fair for Foreigners coming in Shanghai!
logo
联系我们隐私协议©2024 redian.news
Redian新闻
Redian.news刊载任何文章,不代表同意其说法或描述,仅为提供更多信息,也不构成任何建议。文章信息的合法性及真实性由其作者负责,与Redian.news及其运营公司无关。欢迎投稿,如发现稿件侵权,或作者不愿在本网发表文章,请版权拥有者通知本网处理。