BEIJING, Dec. 9 -- The children of expats working in
Shanghai will be allowed to enroll in their neighborhood public schools starting
next year.
A new regulation, which will be in place in time for
the start of the school year in September, will give a wider choice to overseas
parents who benefit the city's development, the Shanghai Education Commission
said Friday.
Previously, overseas children could only attend
international schools or one of 150 selected public schools.
But some expat parents complained the public schools
were too far away, officials said.
"The upcoming regulation is designed to facilitate
expat parents who are working and making a contribution to the city's
progression," said an official surnamed Zhou at the commission's international
exchange division.
Children will still be able to attend one of the 150
selected schools, but could instead enroll in their residence's catchment-area
kindergarten, primary or high school. There they will be merged in with Chinese
students, rather than attend foreign-only classes, as can happen at the selected
schools.
Zhou said tuition fees for expat children would be
slightly higher than those for their Chinese classmates, who pay about 200 yuan
(25 U.S. dollars) a semester for equipment in kindergarten and primary school
and a fee of 1,000 yuan a semester at high school.
Zhou said a detailed fee structure was yet to be
approved by the local price authority.
For the first time, the rules make a distinction
between the children of expats and children who come to the country on their own
to study. These children, who are mainly from Asian countries, will still only
be allowed to study at one of the 150 selected public schools.
Expats who want to send their children to a local
school must submit one parent's work permit or foreign expert certificate, one
parent's one-year or above residence permit in the city, real-estate ownership
certificate or property lease contract.
A letter from the parent's employer is also needed to
demonstrate the relationship between the child and expat, the regulation ruled.
The city's public schools teach about 2,000 foreign
students under the age of 18. The number is less than 10 percent of the amount
of university students from overseas in the city.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)