Society

    Fewer students taking annual national entrance test

    (China Daily)
    Updated: 2011-06-08 07:43
    Large Medium Small

    Beijing - At one time it was hard for Chinese universities to foresee a day when they would have to struggle to continue their existences.

    A fast rise in enrollment numbers and the intense competition seen every year among the millions of students who wanted to secure an admission to college had made the past decade a "golden era" for such institutions.

    Fewer students taking annual national entrance test

    But the day of reckoning seems to have arrived.

    This year, about 9.33 million students have registered to go to testing sites throughout the country on Tuesday and Wednesday and take the national exams they must pass to gain entrance to college.

    That is 240,000 fewer than were registered for the exams last year. The number has fallen three years in a row since 2008, when 10.5 million people were registered for the exams.

    Ma Yan, a senior consultant for MyCos, a Beijing-based higher education consulting firm, said "the decline results from the fact that there are now fewer high school students, which is a result of the decreased birth rate caused by China's family planning policy."

    "The downward trend in enrollment may last until 2018," Ma added.

    National census figures show that 13.79 million babies were born in 2000, about 10 million fewer than in 1990, according to official records.

    About 73 percent of the applicants this year will be accepted to the college of their choice, an increase of 4 percentage points from last year.

    "As the suppliers of higher education, colleges used to have much greater opportunities to pick among students," Ma said. "But students have more choices now, and the competition among them is no longer so great."

    Another reason fewer people have been registered for the test is that more students are choosing to study overseas. According to statistics from the Ministry of Education, about 200,000 high school students are studying abroad and, as a result, will not take the exam.

    He Yizheng, a student at Dongbei Yucai Middle School in Shenyang, capital of Northeast China's Liaoning province, is practicing English and tennis.

    "I received an offer from the University of Pennsylvania in the United States," he said.

    "Compared with Chinese universities, foreign schools attach greater importance to the improvement of students' general competence."

    A report released earlier this year by China Education Online, an Internet-based educational resource operated by the Ministry of Education, predicted that universities will struggle with money troubles during the next 10 years as they continue to enroll fewer students.

    Smaller student bodies will force many institutions of higher education to make do with less revenue, especially those that are not well-known or are private, the report said.

    Forty-five students at the South University of Science and Technology of China, the first university in the country to recruit students independently of the government, did not take the college entrance exam either.

    The university began its first semester in March after choosing 45 freshmen from a pool of 745 applicants.

    Xinhua

    亚洲AV无码国产精品麻豆天美| 中文字幕精品一区影音先锋| 亚洲日本中文字幕区| 国产真人无码作爱视频免费 | 亚洲国产成人精品无码区在线观看| 亚洲精品无码AV中文字幕电影网站 | 亚洲gv猛男gv无码男同短文| 免费看成人AA片无码视频羞羞网| 亚洲AV无码一区二三区| 免费无码毛片一区二区APP| 国产AV无码专区亚洲AV漫画| 最近中文字幕国语免费完整| 日本妇人成熟免费中文字幕| 国产成人无码免费网站| 手机永久无码国产AV毛片 | 亚洲中文字幕无码一区二区三区| 波多野结衣在线aⅴ中文字幕不卡| 无码高清不卡| 国产无码区| 国产精品无码无在线观看| 中文字幕有码无码AV| 中文字幕1级在线| 在线天堂中文新版www| 色综合中文字幕| 中文在线√天堂| 婷婷综合久久中文字幕| 熟妇人妻中文字幕无码老熟妇 | 制服丝袜人妻中文字幕在线| 大学生无码视频在线观看| 国产成人无码久久久精品一| 国产精品三级在线观看无码| 久久久久久国产精品免费无码| 蜜桃臀无码内射一区二区三区| 国产成人无码久久久精品一| 99精品一区二区三区无码吞精| 国产精品热久久无码av| 日韩A无码AV一区二区三区| 中文无码熟妇人妻AV在线 | 天堂在线最新版资源www中文| 亚洲 日韩经典 中文字幕| 亚洲人成中文字幕在线观看|