School-age population and educational planning in China
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Zheng, Kaidi
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
This study has projected, compared and analysed
the trends in size of the total population, school-going
population (aged 6-14) and level of school enrollment
under various fertility assumptions for China during the
period 1982-2012, as well as associated demands. The
focus of this study is on the future school enrollment
and its implications. Based on population projections by
residence (rural and urban), under different mortality
and fertility assumptions, this study has found that in
general the size of the projected school-age population
aged 6-14 and school enrollment for primary and junior
high school show a falling trend broken by a substantial
period of increase during the period 1982-2012, but the
dimension of changes is varied under different fertility
variants. With the passage of time, the differences
among the projected results under different fertility
variants become larger as a result of the intensified
influence of fertility assumptions.
Taking the projection results under the medium
variant as an example, it is found that the school-going
population decreases by 23 per cent during the period
1982-1992 for rural areas and by 32 per cent during the
period 1982-1999 for urban areas; and increases by 35
per cent during 1992-2005 for rural areas and increase by
less than 0.01 during the period 1999-2001 for urban
areas; then decreases again starting from 2006 and 2002
to the end of the projection period for rural and urban areas respectively. It is further assumed that the
enrollment rate will increase from 87.6 per cent in 1982
to about 99.8 per cent in 2002 for urban areas and from
73.1 per cent in 1982 to about 99.5 per cent in 2012 for
rural areas, indicating the realization of a universal
period of nine years of compulsory education.
Correspondingly, a similar fluctuation occurs to the
associated demands for teachers and funds.
This study has also examined and evaluated some
of the implications of the fluctuation of the projected
trends of school-going population. Although the policy
of population growth control will benefit the people's
well-being and the national development, including the
development of education, this kind of fluctuation in the
population trends that will result from the
implementation of the inconsistent population policy in
the past must be taken into serious consideration by the
policy-makers and education-planners. Flexible and
appropriate strategies should be implemented in advance,
for such aspects as the training of qualified teaching
staff and available funds, in order to accommodate the
future fluctuations in the demand for educational
services.
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