Everyone who has passed the postgraduate exam has his own tutor. Tutors may be conscientious and serve the students, or they may treat graduate students as free labor and work for themselves, but they do not guide the students well. In view of the latter, the Ministry of Education has issued eight guidelines to bind graduate tutors. According to the Guide, tutors should carefully guide graduate students and the selection examination should be fair and just. At the same time, tutors shall not ask graduate students to engage in affairs unrelated to their studies and scientific research, and shall not arbitrarily postpone the graduation time of graduate students in violation of regulations. This set of guidelines clarifies the responsibilities and tasks of tutors and better protects the rights and interests of students.
The Ministry of Education has issued eight guiding opinions to restrict graduate tutors, which are formulated according to the social phenomenon of intensified contradictions between tutors and graduate students. In the news reported before, a female graduate student had to postpone her graduation because her tutor had never passed her graduation thesis. The girl finally couldn't stand this mental torture and chose to jump off a building to commit suicide. In this dead girl's mind, the tutor became the biggest killer. The girl suspected that the tutor failed her thesis on purpose. However, she had no choice but to take back the papers she typed over and over again and revise them. Who knows, in the end, she waited for a result of delaying graduation. Four years in college, two or three years as a graduate student, but now she can't graduate. The girl is overwhelmed and finally ends her life. However, there are many such examples. In fact, from a social point of view, it is difficult for people to have an accurate judgment on such things. Whether this girl's thesis level really fails, or whether she really blames the tutor for being deliberately embarrassed, all this still needs professional measurement to judge.
The Ministry of Education has issued eight guidelines to better safeguard students' rights and interests, but the relevant details need to be improved and better solutions.