Global Times |
August 21, 2012 |
By Yan Shuang |
Pupils at the Bayan Mende Primary School have Mongolian language class. Photos: Courtesy of Rong Yan |
Culture and
language are
intertwined,
so what does
it mean when
students
cannot speak
their own
native
language?
This is
proving to
be an
ominous line
of inquiry
for
Mongolian
scholar Gao
Saiyin
Bayaer, who
has pointed
out that
while some
rural Inner
Mongolian
Primary
school
students
remain
fluent in
their native
tongue, many
are more
comfortable
using
Putonghua
while
others,
particularly
those in
urban areas
cannot even
speak their
native
language.
Gao, a
native
Mongolian
who worked
for 18 years
at ethnic
schools and
local
education
authorities,
relates the
declining
linguistic
competency
to an
increasingly
worrying
ethnic
identity
crisis.
"Nomadic
culture and
ethnic
education in
the region
is
struggling
for
survival,"
said Gao,
adding that
a lack of
cultural
education
combined
with a
booming
albeit
chaotic
process of
urbanization
and economic
development
is fueling
the
situation.
With the
number of
Mongolian
language
schools
shrinking,
Gao is
attempting
to preserve
the local
culture. To
this end he
is
participating
in a
fundraising
campaign
alongside
other
volunteers,
in an effort
to save the
region's
last
village-level
Mongolian-language
primary
school.
The online
campaign to
raise funds
for the
Bayan Mende
Primary
School, the
last
village-level
school that
offers
courses in
Mongolian,
started on
August 7.
Participants
see the
fundraising
campaign as
part of the
fight for
the very
survival of
the culture.
"Fewer rural
schools and
teachers are
teaching
Mongolian
courses,
fewer
students are
speaking and
learning
Mongolian,
and fewer
nomads
living on
the pastures
have made
nomadic
culture
slowly
drifting
away from
the younger
generation
in the
region," he
said.
The
school for
nomads
Bayan Mende,
dubbed the
"horseback
school," was
established
in 1937 and
is located
in the
northwestern
area of
Chifeng. It
teaches
students
from three
nearby
villages,
including
those living
in remote,
sandy areas
which are
difficult to
access. It
has been
classified
as a key
school, but
has been
struggling
to repair
its
dilapidated
teaching
buildings
and poor
infrastructure,
as it only
receives
limited
government
support.
Compounding
the problem
is the fact
that many
students
keep
transferring
to city
schools.
The school
became the
only village
school after
the State
Council
launched a
national
policy to
integrate
schools in
rural areas
in 2001. Due
to speedy
urbanization,
a decreasing
birth rate
in rural
areas and
massive
population
migration
into cities,
the policy
aimed to
better
allocate
resources
and improve
education in
rural areas.
"We're
worried the
region's
ethnic
culture will
die if
students
have nowhere
left to
study their
own culture
and
language,"
said Rong
Yan, a
researcher
with the
Beijing-based
NGO Green
Beagle, the
initiator of
the
fund-raiser.
Green Beagle
plans to
collect
100,000 yuan
($15,730) by
September 1,
when their
volunteers
will visit
the school
with
donations to
purchase
teaching
materials
such as
Mongolian-language
textbooks,
Inner
Mongolian
bows, chess
sets and
musical
instruments.
"Although
the
government
says they
encourage
ethnic
education in
ethnic
groups, the
massive
re-distribution
of rural
schools has
seriously
affected the
life and
basic
education of
local
culture,"
Rong said,
explaining
that many
village
schools
which offer
Mongolian
courses have
shut down
due to the
policy.
In an effort
to halt the
decline in
the spread
of Mongolian
culture, the
regional
government
has
introduced
policies to
encourage
ethnic
education,
including
allocating
extra
funding for
Mongolian-language
schools and
subsidies
for teachers
and ethnic
students.
Spotlight on
policy
The
nationwide
restructuring
of schools
and
education
has been the
subject of
intense
public
debate over
the past
decade, as
numbers of
rural
schools have
declined.
Chen Jiqun,
an artist
who runs a
website
focusing on
Mongolian
culture and
environmental
preservation,
told the
Global Times
that many
village
schools have
illegally
been shut
down by
corrupt
officials
who profited
from the
demolition
and
amalgamation
of campuses.
According to
statistics
from the
Ministry of
Education,
the number
of primary
schools in
China's
rural areas
dropped by
half, and
high schools
by 26
percent from
2001 to
2010. In
Inner
Mongolia,
over 70
percent of
the schools
have been
shut down or
merged with
some 2,600
remaining
throughout
the entire
region. In
the region's
Xilin Gol
League for
example,
only two
township
primary
schools
still
remained
after the
policy was
implemented.
Although
most village
schools have
been merged
into bigger
schools
which offer
better
facilities,
students
have had to
transfer to
schools far
away from
home and the
education
received in
bigger
classes
isn't always
suitable,
Gao said.
"In some
schools
there are
more than 80
students in
a single
class. Some
don't teach
Mongolian
and even if
they do,
Inner
Mongolian
kids find it
difficult to
manage study
and are less
willing to
learn
because
they're
spending
more time
with Han
students,"
he said.
A way
forward
Education
experts and
rural
development
foundations
convened a
meeting in
May to
discuss the
policy and
called on
the
government
to make
changes.
Amid public
criticism,
the Ministry
released a
draft plan
on July 22
that
included
policy
adjustments.
According to
the plan,
the closure
or
amalgamation
of schools
should be
halted if
most of the
parents
involved are
opposed. It
should also
be stopped
in cases
where the
school can't
ensure
sufficient
education or
accommodation
resources
for the
large
numbers of
transferring
students.
Schools that
have been
closed
without due
consideration
of these
factors will
be reopened,
according to
the plan.
Shi
Huangguan, a
primary
school
teacher in
Dangsanyao
township,
Baotou, told
the Global
Times that
his students
are mostly
Han, and
with just 10
Mongolian
kids in his
school, they
are becoming
more like
the Han
people and
don't know
the
Mongolian
language.
On August
11, some 70
writers with
the Chifeng
Writers
Association
gathered at
the Bayan
Mende
primary
school for
the
unveiling
ceremony of
a Mongolian
Aobao, which
is a stone
pile used
for cultural
ceremonies
and praying
for good
fortune.
Meanwhile,
Green Beagle
has
currently
collected
8,900 yuan
in donations
and the
local
education
authorities
has approved
a 20,000
yuan budget
for more
copies of
Mongolian-language
textbooks.
A public
museum with
a nomadic
culture
heritage
collection
is needed to
raise public
awareness of
the need to
preserve the
culture,
Chen
suggested.