Little Girl Stands Outside Classroom Window Every Day

A 6-year-old girl listens to class outside the classroom window.

From Tianya, October 14th 2008:

Yesterday, someone reported that a pupil at the Binhe Road Primary School in Dengfeng City [in Henan province] has been standing outside the classroom to listen to lessons for over 20 days, suspecting that the teacher was punishing the student.

Yesterday afternoon at 2pm, a reporter rushed to Binhe Road Primary School. After hearing the class bell ring, the students entered the classroom one by one. However, under the classroom window for Class 1-3, a little girl carrying a backpack said goodbye to the schoolmates who talk to her. She grabbed the steel bar of the window with both hands and looked into the classroom uninterrupted. After reporter’s inquiry, the little girl is called Guo Xiaoxiao (name changed), from Wangzhuang Village nearby/of Dengfeng City, and 6-years-old this year. She used to attend class in this room but, for reasons unknown, she was kicked out of class. Not wanting to leave the school and still wanting to study, she could only stand under the window to listen to the lessons.

When Xiaoxiao’s father Guo Zhanchao arrived shortly later, seeing his daughter standing outside the window listening to class, he was unable to hold back his sobs. He told the reporter that he pedals three-wheel carts (carrying goods) for a living. Originally, he knew the Binhe Road School Headmaster Zhao. At the start of the school year, unable to find a school that would admit his child, he borrowed and gathered 500 RMB and gave it to Headmaster Zhao. Mr Zhao immediately agreed to admit Guo Xiaoxiao to the school, but later Mr Zhao delayed and delayed until the afternoon of September 10th when Mr Guo’s daughter was finally assigned to Class 1-3. But good things do not last; on September 18th, the daughter who had been attending school for only a few days said to her father while crying that the teacher would no longer let her into class, and that she could only stand outside the window to listen to lessons. Soon after, Guo Zhanchao went almost daily to the school to see the headmaster, but Headmaster Zhao only agreed to return the money and did not plan on arranging Guo Xiaoxiao to attend school.

Guo Zhanchao said with tears, “I suffered my whole life because I don’t have an education, and today can only depend on pedaling a three-wheel cart to raise my family with difficulty. I just want my daughter to learn some knowledge, so she can have a happy life later.”

Mr Zhao, headmaster of Binhe Road Primary School, commented on the incident saying that he is unfairly blamed. He said Guo Zhanchao and him knew each other from before, that he did indeed receive the 500 RMB money that Guo forcefully left in his office, but he later returned the money to Guo. Regarding letting Guo Xiaoxiao’s attend school, he can only feel sorry for their family’s situation, but could not arrange for her to attend school simply because they gave him a gift. Later, he could not do anything against the exclusion of Xiaoxiao. “That was handled in accordance to the relevant regulations of the Department of Education. She is the child of a peasant who migrated to the city for work, not a pupil of this area.”

Comments on Sina:

Everyone has their own duty. The duty of a farmer is to cultivate the fields, his daughter should research how to cultivate fields. Studying is for us city dwellers, hehe.

I cried…I can’t handle seeing little children, especially little girls, suffering the most… Seeing the girl stand by the window looking inside. it was unbearable.

Do you believe that I dare smash this kind of school?!

If you let one of her in today, tomorrow there might be 10 who come. City dwellers basically now all only have one child, but rural people all have 3 or 5. One husband and wife pair from the city occupies one seat in a classroom, but a rural husband and wife pair would occupy 3-5 seats in a classroom. I ask you, do you think this is fair and rational?

Old Mao utilised the farmers’ power to conquer everything under the sky [in this context: China]. He owes the farmers the most, because he separated people into different classes. This policy continues to this day without reform. [referring to the hukou system]

Do not carelessly be sympathetic. She should go to school in the place she is supposed to go to. School is not a homeless shelter.

Peasants, peasants. Pity the lowest class of people!

The child is worth our sympathy. But how come the countryside’s other children are not standing outside the windows to listen to class, is all because of their parents.

Do you have a method of contact? I will pay to let the child go to school!
TMD, what kind of society is this!!!!

Whether or not she can go to school is not the key, the key is why kick the little girl out after letting her go to school for a period of time? and then kick her out? There is some story inside here, was it because they gave too little money!!! Is anyone thinking the same thing?

I did not have to read the content, just looking at the pictures, my tears started running down. I ask the school headmaster and the teachers: Do you even see the girl standing outside the door?

Regardless in which city in China, migrant workers are always the lowest class, the most bullied people. There is [officially] no tuition fee nationwide, but I still have to pay 500-600 RMB a semester for my child to go to school in Puning City [in Jieyang, Guangdong province]. Migrant workers just suffer bullying. This kind of teacher should have been expelled from the teaching corps long ago. This little girl is so sad. Bastard teachers, if she were your child, how would you feel?

First figure out whether the local department of education really has this kind of regulation. If it really does, then find out whether there are schools admitting children of migrant workers. This society does not pity tears. Asking for help is not as good as helping yourself.

The only thing that is a bigger failure than the Chinese football [soccer] team is the Chinese education system. What is it that makes those who have received educations have such cold hearts?

Nobody said peasants are bad. Peasants can stay home and plant fields. Why do they want to come to the cities to be migrant workers? All she needs to do to go to school is go home, no one is stripping her of her right to an education. The reason she cannot go to school is entirely a result of her parents coming to work in the city for their own personal benefits.

Comments on Mop:

I always thought compulsory education was real…[I was] “very foolish, very naive“…

The people suffering the most in China are actually not the migrant workers,
but their children.
This damn system system of China’s…sigh, there is nothing left for me to say…

Beginning from when we are small, we have heard, seen, and been told that socialism is good. But after growing up, we have no idea where socialism is good!!

In China, the education system has never been fair and just, there is not much reason to be so angry.
Just live numbly in this country.
Talk about human rights are all lies.

Americans say we don’t have human rights. Do we still need to refute it?

People always say that the foreigners look down on us Chinese, but now even Chinese look down on their own people, so how can others respect us?

If it were me, standing outside like that while the other students were inside attending class, I do not know how I would feel. Such a little child, and letting her suffer how unfair this society is, it is too pitiful.

Comments on Tianya:

What were the parents thinking? Why did they bring her into this world, to let her suffer, and her young soul suffer mutilation.

Seeing the child’s longing, I can’t stop the tears from flowing down my face. What kind of society is this, that would let such little child suffer such unfairness and discrimination? Where is the “harmony?” [China's government repeatedly emphasizes a "harmonious" society for China.]

It reminds me of the phrase “Chinese and dogs are not allowed to enter!”

I don’t know whether I am qualified to talk about education here. I am not an expert, I am just a normal student at a no-name university, so my view on education may not be mature. It may even be extreme, so please don’t laugh at me, and if I am wrong, I hope everyone can be tolerant.

When we were in primary school, teacher told the students to keep their hands behind their back, their heads held high, and their chest out. We did a we were told and listened to the teacher. Not making mistakes was what makes a good child, so whatever the teacher said, that is what we did; whatever the teacher taught, that is what we learned. If our grades were not bad, and if we tested into a good junior high or a good high school, then we would be deeply grateful to the teacher. When I got to university, in the midst of different events and activities, I finally realised I did not know how to do anything, that I had to think on my own, and it was very difficult to have my own ideas. It was then that I realized that we have already lost our creativity. Who should be blamed? I think the teachers are innocent, and the blame lies on the whole society’s education system.

Look at our graduating students. All of them are the same, there is no personality. When I say personality is not about dressing fashionably or or behaving weird, but about the ways they think about problems, a type of attitude about life. Today’s students are all premature, their way of handling things appears to be smooth and mature. In reality, it is not, because these were all copied from others and not what they came to understand themselves. This can also be called education and learning with Chinese characteristics.

Everyone says China is a strong manufacturing country, but it is not strong country in research and development. I think it is definitely not a problem of technology, but to a great extent it is because our education methods have imprisoned our thinking, and restricted our development. What we students are most skilled at is not thinking but learning, learning other people’s methods. Normally when we are working, we wait for other people to teach, and then become like masters after we have learned. I think China will never become strong relying on these methods.

Maybe what I say is not all fair and sound, but the actual situation is basically like that. Someone said that one’s thinking determines one’s life, that is to say, whatever level of thinking you reach will determine what your life will be like. I really approve of this kind of of saying. Indeed, the type of education a person, a society, and a country receives will directly relate to that country’s rise and fall, success and failure.

Now that society has become like this, who should we blame? The people’s living standard has risen somewhat, but whose standard has risen the most? While we have gained something on the materialistic level, have we not also lost something at the same time? These things, who should we blame?

What would you do? Do you let this one girl go to this school or should the rules be followed because there are reasons for the rules? – Fauna

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  1. Understand the school has rules to follow, understand the background of the girl’s family. But let this poor girl standing outside the classroom for so long and pretending not seen is just so so wrong. Shame on those teachers and the shitty headmaster!

  2. @ Kai
    Jeebus…go away for 5 days and now I have a book to read…and to write… ;)

    OK, first, my mistake:
    “No one, least of all me, was denying you an opinion. I’m not sure why you got that impression.”
    You’re right. With long threads, I sometimes rely on memory instead of rereading everything, you never actually said or even implied it. My mistake. We had been talking about another poster being condescending, etc etc and I went off on that because it’s a pet peeve of mine.

    Other stuff:

    Yes, the USSR did engage in the space race even though they weren’t up to the standard of what I deemed to be a requisite level of economic and social development; and yes, that influenced the US to do it too. All true. And, before I proceed I’d like to qualify my statement of “bragging rights”. After looking back at it again, I don’t think that quite expresses my thoughts clearly enough. In a way, it was almost solely about “bragging rights” – as in, “we did it first, so our country (and therefore our communist/capitalist system) is better than yours.” Again, my point here is that both of them had really a lot to gain at that time. Those were the only two superpowers in the world at the time, battling it out on every front imaginable, so any victory of any kind (symbolic, military or otherwise) was huge. Thus, the USSR had a lot to gain from “winning” this, so it made sense to them to pursue space exploration even though there were possibly a lot of other things they could have spent their money on.

    I still think that in no way is China in the same situation right now. I agree that the idea of “We can do it too!” is an important one and it shouldn’t be discounted completely.

    “Wouldn’t such a position boil down to you dictating what China can or cannot do? Wouldn’t it boil down to you expecting that China seek approval from you before making their own decisions and spending their own resources?”

    I can see what you mean that some people could interpret it in that way, and this goes back to what we were saying before about how foreigners express opinions about China and how Chinese react to those opinions. It’s certainly possible for anyone to take any statement (especially one posted on the internet, where you can’t rely on any body language or other context to help you understand the real meaning) in the wrong way and lead it down a path the writer never intended. It’s also possible for foreigners to express opinions in the way that, as you said earlier, singles out China as being “uniquely moronic”. Personally, I’ve never said that China can or can’t do anything it wants. They could build a goddamn space station run by highly trained monkeys that uses panda cubs for fuel for all I care….actually, I would care – panda cubs are so cute! I’ve only ever said that I don’t agree with it, and I think you’re blowing it out of proportion to say suddenly that it would lead to me dictating terms to China and China seeking my approval. Are there people (and countries, possibly) out there that do think that way? Probably. Do they have good solid warm-hearted intentions that are just getting misinterpreted? Maybe, maybe not. But there are other people out there who just like weighing in on things without getting anywhere close to dictating the terms of another countries’ development.

    I do have one problem with something you said though (but I can’t quote it as fancifully as you can, with colours and sh*t ;):

    “You are not in a position of understanding the decision-maker’s set of values. Absent that information, you cannot conclude conclusively (heh) whether or not such a decision is actually illogical or unreasonable to the party you are simultaneously arguing it affects.”

    The problem I have with this possibly comes from my culture. In Canada (as well as other parts of the western world) we are pretty open to criticizing the government about just about everything. How often do we ever know the set of values of the government, and the real reasons why they are doing something? I’m not sure of the answer to that question. If we never know the values and reasons, does that mean we can never criticize anything at all? I’m not sure that’s a good idea, since often the criticism itself can often lead to a more open discussion of what those values and/or reasons actually are, thus increasing transparency and discussion of the given topic. I would personally love to know the governments reasoning behind it. If it’s anything like USTCer suggested, it could definitely make me change my mind about the whole thing.

    Anyways, that’s seriously all I have time for. I actually read your comments yesterday but haven’t had enough time over these last two days to assimilate and formulate a good response. Damn work, getting in the way of the internet!

    Hey, this was fun by the way. Even though it was fun, could you keep the response to less than 1000 words? ;)

  3. @ Teacher in China:

    LoL, well, I’m trying not to comment too much on chinaSMACK anymore. Getting old and no longer feel like I can stem the never-ending tide of idiocy. Best for me to stick to the sidelines as the commenter community expands further. Maybe you understand. However, I do enjoy discussions with civil, rational folk like you. Okay, I’ll try to be concise;

    Again, my point here is that both of them had really a lot to gain at that time. Those were the only two superpowers in the world at the time, battling it out on every front imaginable, so any victory of any kind (symbolic, military or otherwise) was huge.

    Consider what China has to gain from the space program, both at home domestically and on the global/international scale. Then try to put yourself in the shoes of the ruling single-party Communist government, quite possibly the only “communist”, “non-liberal democracy” that commands any acknowledgment and influence (Putin Russia is arguable) in the modern world years after the fall of the “communist” USSR.

    Do you think you might be discounting or unable to see what victory (symbolic, military, or otherwise) the Chinese government might have, especially amongst its own populace, the very people who grant the rulers their legitimacy?

    This is why I am not surprised when you write:

    I still think that in no way is China in the same situation right now.

    Notice the “I.” The key oversights in your argument are your value-judgments. You’re still looking at their decisions from the perspective of an outsider with different values, motivations, and goals. My response to you is that it really isn’t that hard to think of what is motivating the Chinese government (or people) to make the decisions they do. Without understanding their motives, it is that much harder to influence them, right?

    I’ve only ever said that I don’t agree with it, and I think you’re blowing it out of proportion to say suddenly that it would lead to me dictating terms to China and China seeking my approval.

    Oh, I’m not actually accusing you of that, I’m merely playing out the logical consequences of that line of thought. You must admit that it is not just an interpretation but, on some philosophical level, a truth. Is telling others what to do wrong? Not necessarily, but it is by-product of limited beings seeking to control their environment. My main thrust is not that control or even seeking to control is inherently wrong (nay, it is natural), but that there are more or less successful ways of controlling or seeking to control. This is why we agree that condescension doesn’t work well in this situation.

    I do have one problem with something you said though (but I can’t quote it as fancifully as you can, with colours and sh*t ;):

    “You are not in a position of understanding the decision-maker’s set of values. Absent that information, you cannot conclude conclusively (heh) whether or not such a decision is actually illogical or unreasonable to the party you are simultaneously arguing it affects.”

    Try using [blockquote] and [/blockquote] but replacing the enclosing brackets with the greater than > and lesser than < marks. The second blockquote closes off what you wanted to quote.

    Again, the above is more or less philosophical point-hammering. It again reiterates that we are limited beings who are limited in our understanding of what motivates others to do what they do. Hence, any judgment of another’s decisions and actions are necessarily limited to our own subjective awareness and belief sets.

    In reality, we all still go about judging others. I mentioned this to help people understand their limitations in judging others and therefore hopefully adjust how they judge in order to maximize their chances of actually influencing others to the outcome they desire. Someone who disagrees with others, doesn’t give a shit what they think, and chooses to dictate/prescribe/force them into submission will have a harder time than someone who disagrees with others but then first seeks to understand others before influencing them.

    So the answer to your question:

    If we never know the values and reasons, does that mean we can never criticize anything at all?

    Abso-fucking-lutely not. Again, my point was about HOW one criticizes, not whether one does or not. However, I guess you can say I DO think it is better for one to NOT criticize than to criticize BADLY. Why? Because those idiots make everything harder.

    I think we’re largely in agreement, brother man, though on the more mundane subject of the US vs USSR vs China space programs, I guess I am a bit more sympathetic to (but not necessarily in full agreement with) the Chinese government blowing the cash pursuing it than you are. Cheers.

  4. Very interesting, you’ve certainly given me a lot to think about. One day when I have more time I may actually sit down and respond ;)
    Keep on fighting the good fight!

  5. Please send me some sort of contact information for this child’s father. I’d like to help out if I can.
    daikelisi@yahoo.com

  6. Dana,

    What a lucky chappie you are, your english is so impresive, evidently you didn’t have to hang around outside a classroom to learn.

    I can only imagine and hope that that little girl will have more empathy and a hunanistic approach to life and to her fellow people than you have. At least she will have humility in her life.

  7. Come on, the kid does’t belong to the school district, and the parent tried to bribe their way in unsuccessfully.

    Even in US students are not usually accepted outside their school district.

  8. Here, in US primary school enrollment is subject to residency verification:

    http://www.google.com/search?q=primary+school+enrollment+residency+verification

  9. We all have someone very close and dear to our hearts (children, brothers and sisters) and we will certainly be parents one day. The fact that the poor girl standing outside the classroom for 20 days in the cold just goes to show who do we have in the schools. Those who are in charge from the school concern up till the officers in the villages, town and province ought to be hang by their toes for as long as the little girl had been standing outside the classroom. Shame on you – Teachers, Principals and government officials !!

  10. sh, what about the parents who keep sending their daughter to the wrong school and leave her there in the cold for 20 days? They are blameless?

    Feel free to hate China, just don’t let the facts get in the way.

  11. Even if the parents are wrong…shouldn’t the school do something ? instead of leaving the poor girl stand there for 20 days or more ?

    I do not hate China, I think China is great. The problem is with those who are in authority and do nothing about it.

  12. i really don’t mind looking after that child and her education, poor girl, how much money China spend to get the Olympics but they couldn’t see the inner poverty living just next to there trashcans. stupid people!!!

  13. Ah, the classic troll. Take a specific example, generalize then bash everyone in the process.

  14. Agree 100% with igi. The Olympics is just 1 big sham.

    The athletes competing often are not the best in the world. Theres way too much cheating. It doesn’t help the local economy in the long run.

    The Olympics only does 1 thing, waste money.

  15. Dana…. what can i say to your self rightous arrogance… ??? Maybe.. your still a self rightous Chinese (Oriental) twat with an inferior complex?

  16. The ignorant person that wrote this comment:

    “Everyone has their own duty. The duty of a farmer is to cultivate the fields, his daughter should research how to cultivate fields. Studying is for us city dwellers, hehe.”

    really shows how educated they are. This person should be the one working in a field, because this person has the mentality that plague and leech off government.

    I strongly believe that if a nation is to progress and grow it should be to educate all it’s children. Many will not make it, but that is there choice and they will be the ones working the fields, and the ones that do make it are the ones that will make a strong government and take this country to the next level.

  17. Until the children and people of China are truly allowed to move about the country freely, how can the system be fixed? By blocking this group and that person from living in Shanghai/Beijing/Guangzhou(where the best schools are)we’re dooming the countryside to the vicious cycle of poor schools, poor children, and poor parents. In this time of economic crisis people are being forced to return West, and to what? It’s like “busing” inner city kids in Chicago. You’ve got to give these kids a chance and you can’t do that with excuses and policy restrictions. The poor are on the doorsteps of the rich, ignore them at your own peril.

  18. As a human…let that poor girl study…unless u r not a human…maybe i m not qualified to comment on the education policy of prc but for us in Malaysia…education is for all,even for foreigner…i have a lot of Chinese friend n from what heard from them,i only can said that…u r nothing if not given the chance [to whom it may concern]

  19. Not letting a student attend a school because they’re peasants from an other district??

    And this just adds on the the list of hardships that accompany a migrant worker’s life and family…how to help them? There are millions of cases out there just like this!

  20. I laugh at people who laugh at this kid. She has shown how true she is to herself and really a good example. If fellow Chinese on this site are laughing and saying it is for city dwellers, then i pity where China is heading to.

  21. are you kidding, this are your country men, that little girl wants nothing but to study. if you don’t help each other then who will no wonder americans beats the shit out of you.
    won’t help each other and expect to beat America in everything. if you have uneducated ,Illiterate , people in your country wonder how are you goinh to compete against superpower.
    haha the jokes on you. gay boy that wrote following comments

    1.)If you let one of her in today, tomorrow there might be 10 who come. City dwellers basically now all only have one child, but rural people all have 3 or 5. One husband and wife pair from the city occupies one seat in a classroom, but a rural husband and wife pair would occupy 3-5 seats in a classroom. I ask you, do you think this is fair and rational?

    2)Everyone has their own duty. The duty of a farmer is to cultivate the fields, his daughter should research how to cultivate fields. Studying is for us city dwellers, hehe.

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