Post-Mao education
After Mao’s death on Sept. 9, 1976, the new leaders lost no time in announcing a turnabout of ideological-political emphasis from revolution to development. They decreed that all effort should be directed toward “the four modernizations” (industry, agriculture, national defense, and science and technology). The primary task of education was to train the personnel needed to speed up the modernization program.
The post-Mao schools were very different from those of the revolutionary education. The conventional school system was reinstated. Full-time schools again became the mainstay of a system of coordinated schools, with orderly advance from level to level regulated by examinations. School discipline was restored, and due respect for teachers was expected of students. Serious study was not to be overshadowed by extracurricular activities; the line of demarcation between formal and informal education was clearly drawn. The main task of students, said Deng Xiaoping, was “to study, to learn book knowledge,” and the task of the school was to make “strict demands on students in their study…making such studies their main pursuit.”
Acquisition of knowledge was again a legitimate aim of education. Academic learning and the development of the intellect returned after a decade of ... (200 of 123,993 words)