NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions
2009
BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- Chinese education
authorities should formulate a regulation on manual labor for schoolchildren as
many kids in cities even do not clean their own classrooms, a political advisor
has proposed.
Feng Shiliang, member of the 11th National Committee
of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), said Monday
he was concerned that manual labor such as sweeping has been outsourced by some
urban primary and middle schools to property management companies.
"The students' ability for labor has been strangled,"
Feng said.
Many children in cities are doing little manual
labor, as at home their parents do all the housework and at school labor is
taken over by employees of property management companies, Feng added.
He refuted the pretext by some schools that manual
labor might be "dangerous" for children. "It might be dangerous to clean windows
of tall buildings, but how about the classrooms and playgrounds?"
The advisor said he would submit a proposal to the
upcoming annual session of the CPPCC National Committee, the country's top
political advisory body, to suggest country's education authorities formulate a
regulation on manual labor for schoolchildren.
Feng said Chinese schools should learn from their
Japanese counterparts as it is must for Japanese students to do manual labor and
some Japanese schools organize students to work in remote islands and villages.
"We are virtually making our children aristocratic,"
he said.
The Second Session of the 11th CPPCC National
Committee will open Tuesday afternoon and last nine days, said spokesman for the
session Zhao Qizheng Monday.
