Shanghai is making great efforts to fuel development in the remote western
part of China.
It has sent talented volunteers to work there, invited scholars from there to
visit Shanghai and study here, and also developed distance education and service
systems to help in a more direct way.
Magnolia Tele-education Network for Medical Training opened online at the end
of last month. Offering medical consultation and training programs for medical
workers online, the network mainly targets people in Yunnan Province and the
former Three Gorges Region. It has been warmly received since its launch, with
some 1,000 people visiting it everyday.
Simao Training Center is a distance education center for farmers. During its
three years of operation, 7,000 farmers have gained agricultural knowledge and
learned scientific and modern farming skills.
Local scientific and educational organizations have also jointly organized
live online lectures on economics, management, and important national and
international topics, such as regional wars and China's entry to the World Trade
Organization.
So far, a total of about 2,000 distance education centers have been set up,
nearly 10,000 people in western China have received training programs offered
online by Shanghai organizations, and some 2,000 patients have received online
medical help from the Magnolia network.
"The services offered by people in Shanghai are just great," said a resident
of Yunnan who has been helped by the Magnolia network.