CHENGDU, Sept. 2 (Xinhua) -- About 7.5 million Chinese households tuned
into a program on emergency survival presented by basketball star Yao Ming and
other members of China's Olympic team on Monday, China Central Television said
on Tuesday.
"The First Class", aired nationwide by CCTV from 7 p.m. to 9
p.m., was scheduled to coincide with the start of the academic fall semester
and would be played as part of the national curriculum, according to
the CCTV.
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Pupils chat at the gate of Gaotai Primary School in Lueyang County, Hanzhong City, northwest China's Shaanxi Province, on Sept. 1, 2008. About 7.5 million Chinese households tuned into a program on emergency survival presented by basketball star Yao Ming and other members of China's Olympic team on Monday, China Central Television said on Tuesday. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
It was considered a ratings success for an educational program broadcast
during prime time and it would be aired three more times during peak viewing
hours at the weekend in response to public feedback.
Jointly produced with the Ministry of Education, "The First Class" featured
was divided into four units. Yao Ming and 17 national basketball players
presented one lesson, helping an elderly paralyzed man and four children escape
flooding by climbing onto a five-meter high vine frame.
At the end of the unit, Yao told the audience that teamwork had helped them
succeed. "Teamwork guaranteed our escape," said the 2.26-meter star.
In another unit, China's eight Olympic weight-lifting champions helped 24
students from Sangzao Middle School, in Anxian County, Sichuan, in a building
evacuation during a simulated earthquake.
During the May 12 earthquake, all of the school's 2,300 students and
teachers evacuated the buildings to an open area within 96 seconds, a result of
evacuation drills conducted since 2005.
Program supervisor Xu Wenguang said "The First Class" was planned as the
first in a series of "life education" programs, which would include themes such
as character building.
"I want to make it a long-term program, a brand name of our channel," said
Xu.
The program was also intended to support emergency survival training in
schools, which has been stepped up since the devastating May 12 earthquake.
All 3.4 million students in the Sichuan quake zone returned to school on
Monday, a provincial education official said, adding that all would enjoy free
education.
About 33 percent of students returned to their former schools, which were
unaffected in the earthquake, 38 percent returned to buildings that had been
reinforced, while 28.4 percent were studying in prefabricated classrooms, said
Tu Wentao, head of the provincial education department.
Almost 20,000 students in the worst-hit areas would have to leave their
home towns to seek schooling. About 11,000 would study in 16 other cities in the
province. The rest would begin classes in 25 other provinces, including
Guangdong and Shanghai, he said.
"We will not tolerate a single student dropping out of school because of
the disaster and poverty."
Shanghai middle school students found "Sichuan earthquake" content in their
Chinese text books this semester, in the category of "dealing with disaster",
teaching students how to stand up to difficulties and setbacks in their lives.
This semester also marked the start of nine-year free compulsory education
for China's 28.21 million urban primary and middle school students.
The students still must pay for textbooks and uniforms. About 150 million
rural students already benefit from the policy.