Opinion / Li Xing
Pave way for students with disabilities
By Li Xing (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-05-18 06:40
In early January, three third-year senior high students from the Beijing
School for the Visually Impaired told the Beijing Youth News that they
wanted to participate in the annual national College entrance examination.
Five months have passed. Fewer than four weeks before the exams are to
take place between June 7 and June 9, the local daily newspaper reported
that the three students have not been able to put their names on the exam
roster.
The authorities in charge of the application and examination have denied
knowing about the students' applications.
Meanwhile, officials with the municipal education bureau say they are
still figuring out how to produce the exam papers and arrange for the
visually impaired students to take the exam, how these students can
finish their education once they are enrolled, and how they start work
once they graduate.
I have a feeling that these officials are not enthusiastic about removing
hurdles to smooth the ways for the three teens to fulfil their aspiration
of getting a mainstream college education.
Take, for instance, the hurdle of producing exam papers. Jin Wanzhi, who
teaches at the Beijing School for the Visually Impaired, has told the
media that it would only take him some 40 hours to turn the exams into
Braille.
While the Beijing education officials claim they are still researching
how and what to do, their colleagues in Shanghai have already
accomplished most of their duties.
Starting in 2002, Shanghai began to take applications from blind and
visually impaired senior high school graduates. The courses for the exam
- including Chinese, English (both written and listening), mathematics
and history - and the exam papers are specially designed and printed in
Braille.
The applicants take exams on the same days between June 7 and 9, but at
the specially designated location.
Thanks to all these affirmative procedures, 26 visually impaired students
- some who are totally blind - have enrolled in Shanghai Teachers'
University and East China Normal University since 2002.
Obviously, Shanghai has established a good system for Beijing to follow.
Moreover, these officials are required by law - Law on the Protection of
the Rights of the Disabled, which took effect more than 15 years ago - to
facilitate the disabled people's rights to education, which includes
going to mainstream colleges and universities.
Beijing, the country's capital with far more resources in college
education than any other provinces and regions, should have been the
pioneer in assisting the disabled young people, the blind and visually
impaired included, in realizing their dreams.
The government is duty-bound to work harder to help those with
disabilities join mainstream society instead of keeping them marginalized
in their own isolated jobs and communities.
It is heartening to read that the students and teachers are not giving up
their efforts to realize their dreams.
But the Beijing education officials have no excuse to continue to stall
in their decision and preparation work.
Email: lixing@chiandaily.com.cn
(China Daily 05/18/2006 page4)
Hot Talks
� Share Our Crafts: Naming contest
� The microprints of 1980s Shanghai
� The ceremony at the White House
� Do teenagers really need mobiles?
� China's Serious Environment Problem
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.
Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments:
Post a Comment