Teaching in Tibet: Changing attitudes

By Liu Jianing
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail China.org.cn, August 12, 2021
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Deputy headmaster Song Yugang fills in a form for a student on July 28. [Photo by Liu Jianing/China.org.cn]

After graduating from university 24 years ago, Song Yugang became a teacher at Central Primary School of Rutog township in Maizhokunggar county, Lhasa, where the average altitude is over 4,300 meters. 

Song is the only teacher from the Han ethnic group in the school. When Song first arrived, he couldn't speak Tibetan and so struggled to communicate with the students and their parents. By learning from his students, it took him three years to become fluent in Tibetan, and he is now able to speak like a native.

Remote education

In 2003, Song introduced remote education into the school. Thanks to his efforts and an education-promoting program, the students have all achieved a solid grasp of computers. Teachers online provide the students with better educational resources, and enable them to study a wider range of subjects.

Song has also designed a series of classes in the school to help preserve local Tibetan culture, such as the traditional local guozhuang dance. 

Value of education

Song Yugang talks in Tibetan with a parent in his office, July 29. [Photo by Liu Jianing/China.org.cn]

The conditions in the school now are a far cry from what Song first encountered 24 years ago. He still remembers how the ceilings of the earth-made classrooms would leak whenever it rained, and on snowy days, the teachers had to sweep snow off the roof. Now they have tall teaching buildings with clean, well-equipped classrooms and modern equipment.

However, the most remarkable change has been the local people's attitudes toward education. In the past, parents would simply take their children to school, but now they encourage them to study hard. 

Phunstog Tashi, head of Rutog township, believes that families there put greater value in education than ever before. For Tashi, this is thanks to the policy that provides Tibetan students with free school-based accommodation, meals and education, as well as efforts by the government to raise people's awareness in schooling, and residents seeing how education can improve people's lives.

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