Around 9.4 million Chinese students took the gaokao, China's college entrance examination, in early June. Despite the fact that young people have more choices nowadays than in the past, the test continues to be regarded as a crucial, life-changing event.
Shenzhen plans to build five or six more international schools by 2020 in an effort to meet the demand of a growing foreign population.
Course will give foreign students more insight into Chinese Buddhism
The internet of things may hold great benefits for left-behind children, one of China's most vulnerable groups.
To Wang Mudi, a grade six student at a rural junior middle school, nothing beats calligraphy class every Wednesday.
A Sino-French program run by Sun Yat-Sen University and the alliance for civil nuclear engineering education in France held a graduation ceremony for its first 72 master's degree graduates, who are expected to be a driving force in China's fast-developing nuclear industry.
Authorities continue investigations after children across the country reported feeling unwell after playing on synthetic surfaces. Sun Xiaochen reports.
Many parents of kindergarten and primary school students in Suzhou, Wuxi, Nanjing and Changzhou - all in Jiangsu province - claim their children suffered nosebleeds, dizziness and rashes after attending schools with recently installed plastic running tracks or playgrounds.
Frequent reports of illnesses related to synthetic running tracks and playgrounds on China's campuses have attracted the attention of education experts, who are now urging the upgrade of national standards for the construction and supervision of school facilities.
Wang Xiaoping says she quit her job in 2002 at the age of 55 when she came under pressure after working as commissioning editor on a controversial novel.
Migrant construction workers help build all the skyscrapers in China's big cities, but they typically cannot afford to buy an apartment in any of them.
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