China's economy is increasing year by year, but since 2000, the dropout rate of compulsory education has been increasing year by year. Over the years, I have come into contact with many people in education. In the early years, everyone was struggling with the problem of 4% (that is, the education sector called for the overall investment in education to reach 4% of GDP). About 65,438+00 years ago, I heard from Mr. Ge that China had the ability to build a railway to Tibet. Why can't compulsory education be free? At present, compulsory education is free and renamed as free compulsory education, but free compulsory education has not reduced the dropout rate for many reasons. "Exploring administrative public interest litigation in the field of education can effectively guarantee the implementation of the compulsory education policy. Procuratorial organs protect minors' right to compulsory education through public interest litigation, which has achieved good legal and social effects and responded to the new requirements of the people in the new era for public interest protection. "Li Wei, deputy to the National People's Congress and deputy director of the Liquor Design Center of Jiangsu Yanghe Winery Co., Ltd. said. How difficult is it to popularize compulsory education? China has worked hard for decades. Remember to chat with Zhou Daping, a senior education reporter. He said that a common problem in the construction of Pujiu school buildings is the difference between the north and the south. He said that in many rural areas in the south, the biggest problem of school buildings is heating, but there is no such problem in the north, because the north is used to heating in winter. But it has never happened in the southern mountain village, and many children will get frostbite. However, the education department has never paid attention to this problem, and there is no solution. To solve this problem means that the construction cost and future investment of school buildings in different regions will be different.
However, many school buildings in mountainous areas and rural areas built during the nine-year compulsory education in rural areas were largely abandoned under the policy of "removing points and merging schools", and many school buildings were declared no longer in use as soon as they were built. The brutal measures taken by the local government in the implementation process have brought many problems to the follow-up. In 2004 alone, more than 40,000 rural primary and secondary schools in China were abolished, and "going to school nearby" became the disillusioned dream of many rural children. Different studies show that the dropout rate of rural junior high schools in China is about 10%. Liu, a professor of sociology at Huazhong University of Science and Technology, pointed out in the article "Rural Teenagers Drop Out of School to Work and Its Causes" that the dropout rate of rural junior high schools in China is higher than 10%. In addition, the above-mentioned 63% rural children did not attend high school. However, in the official discourse system, the dropout rate of junior high school has been below 3%. The relevant person in charge of the Ministry of Education told Caixin reporter: "The dropout rate within 3% is the result of the national average, and the actual dropout rate in rural areas, especially in western rural areas, is much higher than this." [5] On the other hand, it is also a means for local governments and schools to cope with the assessment.