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A Review of Zhengzhou Education
Recently, Ms. Du of Zhengzhou told reporters that her two children were in danger of dropping out of school, because they had been following their grandparents to school before, but the two old people were sick one after another, and Ms. Du had to take charge of her children's studies personally. However, no school is willing to accept children, on the grounds that there will be no degree if they transfer, and two children may have to drop out of school.

I. Compulsory education stage

As we all know, China implements nine-year compulsory education, so children must never drop out of school, especially those who are still in the compulsory education stage. The school where the household registration is located has the obligation to accept children to go to school, which is stipulated by law and cannot be shirked. Moreover, children who transfer to other schools in the compulsory education stage must be admitted to the school before they can be transferred out. If no school is willing to accept, it needs to study in the original school, otherwise it will cause students to drop out of school.

Second, compulsory education.

This incident also involves the issue of a degree, that is, it is now stipulated that a class has a maximum of more than 40 students. If the class is full, you may not be able to recruit. In fact, this degree restriction problem should not appear in the compulsory education stage. Relevant departments should make overall plans to solve the problem of children going to school well in compulsory education. If the counterpart public school does not have a degree, please ask schools in other school districts to solve it. In a word, the child can't drop out of school.

Third, the handling of transfer.

First of all, if the transfer is still in the compulsory teaching stage, it must be accepted by the school before it can be transferred out. Ms. Du's children have been transferred out, but no school has accepted them. This is definitely not normal. The Education Bureau must help Ms. Zheng solve this problem. If there are no places in counterpart schools, they should also be transferred to schools in other regions. Children in compulsory education should bear the main responsibility for not attending this education bureau. It's not just the parents' problem. The Education Bureau will be suspected of breaking the law.