Jane Chen / Shanghai Daily news
Shanghai's millions of primary school students will have an easy time this
autumn, a traditional season for mid-term examinations.
The city's education
reforms will focus on alleviating academic pressures on school students, from
this year onwards. Henceforth students of grades one and two will not have
mid-term exams and those from grades three to five will have more flexible
academic assessments instead of the mid-term exams, today's Oriental Morning
Post reported.
The reform will introduce a guideline and each school will
apply the same, depending on their own limitations.
Though the reform varies
among districts, the key purpose remains the same; that is to relieve the
students of academic pressures, according to Fang Yin who is with the Yangpu
District Educational Commission. Fang is in charge of the district's
primary school management.
Another reformatory act (prior to the mid-term
exam cancellation) deals with the score report system, Fang noted.
The
previous student handbook which records test scores has been replaced with a
brochure called "student growth record book". Instead of the rigid assessments
such as "good", "excellent" or "fail", lenient encouraging wording as "you need
more hard work" will appear in the book, according to Zhu Jianwei, with Shanghai
Education Commission's primary education division.