Qishan county education
In the Tang Dynasty, Qishan County began to set up county schools. Since the Song and Yuan Dynasties, academies have followed. Social studies were set up in Wanli period of Ming Dynasty, and voluntary studies were set up in Light Year of Qing Dynasty. The county has a guidance office and a discipline office responsible for studying politics. In the thirty-first year of Guangxu in Qing Dynasty (1905), the imperial examination was abolished, promoted to a school, and the county set up an educational administration bureau. In the thirty-second year (1906), Feng Ming Academy was transformed into a higher primary school hall, and more than 30 primary schools were transformed from Yi, Social and Private schools, adding natural sciences, which was the bud of modern education. Then, vocational workshops, agricultural schools and teachers' research institutes were established, and industrial education was initiated. In the early years of the Republic of China, compulsory national education was implemented, schools were changed into schools, and girls' primary schools were established. In the fifth year of the Republic of China (19 16), there were 60 primary schools in the county. In the 14th year of the Republic of China (1925), there was an education bureau in the county. In 28 years (1939), it was renamed the Education Department. People's livelihood is depressed and education is stagnant. In 34 years (1945), illiteracy accounted for 65.28% of the total population. By the spring of 1949, there were only 455 teachers in the county; There are 2 middle schools with 930 students and 206 primary schools with16,000 students. After the founding of People's Republic of China (PRC), education developed in twists and turns. In the early 1950s, with the successful completion of land reform, schools were generally established in rural areas. While developing steadily, we should rectify the teaching order and improve the quality of education. High school was founded in 1956. 1985, the county was awarded the certificate of universal primary education by the provincial people's government. 1989 12 townships (towns) implement six-year compulsory education. At that time, there were 198 primary schools in the county with 46,282 students, and the enrollment rate of school-age children reached 99.7%. There are 49 ordinary middle schools with 23,582 students; There are 3 secondary vocational schools with 1 185 students. There are 7 1049 students in various schools, which is 4.2 times that of 1949 students.