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60% support making Peking Opera compulsory in schools
BEIJING—Over 60 percent of
respondents to an online survey have voiced support for making Peking
Opera, a unique national cultural treasure, compulsory in China’s
primary and middle schools.
The survey, by the mass-circulation China Youth Daily and one of the
country’s major Internet portals Tencent, found 60.7 percent of people
supported the motion, while only 24.9 percent were against it. The
result indicated that “promoting traditional culture and passing down
the national treasure has become a social consensus,” China Youth Daily
said Monday.
The Education Ministry decided in February to start a pilot project of
adding Peking Opera into music courses for primary and secondary schools
in 10 provinces and municipalities, as part of the efforts to reignite
traditional culture.
The project, slated for March to July, added 15 pieces of Peking Opera,
including both classical and modern ones, into music courses for
students. The news, however, has aroused great controversy, with some
saying that untrained teachers and forced instruction might put off
students.
In an earlier opinion poll by China’s leading web portal Sina.com, of
over 21,000 respondents, only 27 percent believe setting up the course
will help promote traditional Chinese culture. Nearly 38 percent think
the course should not be compulsory as students’ choices should be
respected, and the remaining 35 percent propose different regional
operas be taught in different areas since China boasts a huge reservoir
of local operas.
The ministry soon made a clarification, saying the new Peking Opera
curriculum for schools is not compulsory, but is designed as a
promotional course to help students better appreciate Chinese culture.
“The opera classes are by no means a nationwide compulsory class, but
pilot programs implemented in certain schools from March to July next
year,” ministry spokesman Wang Xuming has said.
—Xinhua |