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Education gives young Tibetans a head start

By Hu Yongqi (China Daily) Updated: 2011-05-05 06:58

Education gives young Tibetans a head start
Education gives young Tibetans a head start
 

Keeping ties to home

Like other Tibet middle schools, Beijing Tibet Middle School schedules activities designed to strengthen the students' ties to Tibetan customs. For example, all 810 students must attend one Tibet-language class every week, instructed by native teachers from Lhasa No 1 High School.

Nyima Ngodrup, a Tibet language major at Tibet University, focuses on Tibetan traditional cultures, history and customs for nine classes. "My job is to tell them what traditions stipulate, but it's up to them to follow or not. Most of them are extremely curious."

In 2004, the school held its first "Tibetan Culture Week" and more than 4,000 students have participated since then. The seven-day event involves Tibetan calligraphy, writing, debate, tug of war, handcrafts and a Tibetan singing contest.

An increasingly popular class over the past three years teaches students how to type the Tibetan language on a computer keyboard.

Tibetan-style food is a necessity for traditional festivals, of course, and chefs at the school canteen prepare in advance. On Tibetan New Year, the school's president and teachers arrive before 6 am to greet the students. In return, the students present them hadas, a traditional Tibetan gift for important guests.

Dawa Tsering, a graduate who works at a Tibetology institute, said some parties were held with local primary schools. "Children in Beijing had heard of Tibet but had never been there, so the exchanges between us told them how life was going in Tibet. And we Tibetan students could know what they were concerned with."

"Our concentration is on how to teach students well and live with them as a family," said Li Dongguang, secretary of the school's Communist Youth League Committee. "That's why our students will miss the life here after graduation."

Still an achievement gap

Seventy percent of students at Tibet middle schools come from the families of farmers and herdsmen, said Tenzin, the official from China Tibetology Research Center. He urged people and the government to maintain the importance that is attached to education for rural children because their educational resources are less than those for urban children in Tibet.

More than 90 percent of graduates from Tibet middle schools across the country enroll at universities, compared with 58 percent of local high school graduates in Tibet. Tenzin wants greater efforts to be made to enhance education development in Tibet.

Thousands of teachers step into Tibet to give classes to Tibetan students, while Tibetan teachers and school management personnel - 1,879 just from 2007 to 2009 - are trained in other regions.

"Students from Tibet should recognize that many people work together to provide them with an amiable environment for study," Tenzin said. "They should cherish the opportunity to study harder and show outsiders their real life and a real Tibet."

Dawa Tsering, 35, has traveled to more than 10 countries for academic exchanges to discuss with foreign scholars what is going on in Tibet.

"I usually tell them about my own experience - how Tibetan students are helped to learn more and to make a difference," he said. "More often, I invite them to Tibet to see the real Tibet with their own eyes."

He noted the particular challenges wrought by Tibet's topography, where the plateau elevation averages more than 5,000 meters. People need to work harder to achieve something other provinces could accomplish very easily, he said. "However, I believe Tibet will be better under the support of the central government and all people around the country."


 

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