Many years ago, the Ministry of Education began to strictly investigate the behavior of offline remedial classes. It's not that offline make-up lessons can't be done, but that in-service teachers can't participate in offline paid make-up lessons. This problem existed many years ago, but it has not been really investigated until now. Because there is demand in the market, to put it bluntly, students have the idea of making up lessons. More teachers think that they are really involved in teaching and will understand what students need, and those teachers in the school also need some financial resources to supplement them. Therefore,
As long as offline make-up lessons are not reported, this behavior will continue, and even if it is reported, it is impossible to really ban it from now on. It is almost impossible for offline make-up lessons to gradually disappear, which can only play a very good guiding role. It may need more discussion to standardize the behavior of offline remedial classes and whether teachers can participate in offline paid remedial classes, but we know that blind prohibition does not have much effect. Facts over the years have proved that it has always been forbidden.
Teachers can be said to be vulnerable groups now, because they can't earn much expectation, and all of them are on teachers. The school thinks that teachers should reduce students' burden, parents think that students should be graded, and then teachers themselves are under financial pressure. It is almost impossible to buy a house and a car in a big city with a salary of four or five thousand a month, so the teaching industry is not easy to do. If no dredging measures are introduced, it is estimated that there will be paid remedial classes offline.