The Tibet Autonomous Region, in
southwest China, has made marked progress in the
implementation of compulsory education in recent years.
The region had introduced six-year compulsory
education in 49 of its 74 counties, covering a population of
1.85 million, by the end of 2002, according to a regional
education work meeting held here on Tuesday.
Eight counties and cities with a population of
433,000 in Tibet have implemented nine-year compulsory
education, according to the meeting.
Another
eight counties and cities recently gave an examination
testing local levels of illiteracy, bringing the total
number of such counties and cities to 28 in Tibet.
Thanks to illiteracy elimination projects, the
illiteracy rate of young people in Tibet has dropped to
34.27 percent, compared with 97 percent before the region
was peacefully liberated in 1951.
Both the
central and regional governments attach great importance to
education development in Tibet. Investment in education has
risen year on year and the basic education has progressed
rapidly over the past decades, according to materials from
Tuesday's work meeting.
Statistics show that
Tibet had 3,099 primary and middle schoolswith more than
410,000 students by the end of 2002. At present, 88.3
percent of children of primary school age have attended
school.
From xinhuanet
(01/21/03)