Vocational school helps shape destinies


Once students start at the school, they lead a semi-military life. For example, they have to fold up their blankets and make them box-shaped, just as Chinese soldiers do. Their phones have to be turned off and put in certain place in their classrooms during lessons.
Meanwhile, the closed circuit TV monitoring system at the school covers almost every area.
Students have to stay on campus most of the time, only being allowed out on Sundays. Even then, they have to return before 6 pm. After lessons, students from each class will go to the canteen together in four orderly rows.
Each class has about 60 students, and the total number is more than 20,000. A single class is a highly autonomous body "governed" by a head teacher who is "contracted" and empowered to dispose of 70 percent of students' tuition fees. He pays his teachers money from the 70 percent.
Money will be deducted to pay off losses for the school if students quit, and to cover medical expenses for those who are injured. That which remains covers the "contractors'" income.
- Chinese nationals evacuated from Iran arrive in Beijing
- Latest global rankings show shift in global research landscape
- CPC members work against the clock to restore normal life in rain-hit Hunan
- Ceremony commemorates legendary ancestor of the Chinese civilization Fuxi
- Former KMT chair leads Taiwan delegation to honor Fuxi, Chinese culture
- Shanghai conference discusses occupational mental health in China