Beijing bans foreign textbooks in Primary, Junior High Schools

Beijing: Beijing education authorities have banned the use of foreign textbooks in primary and junior high schools in the Chinese capital, which is seen by experts as the latest development in China’s regulations on schools’ use of teaching materials.
The ban was announced in a document on textbook regulation that the Beijing Municipal Education Commission issued.
According to the document, the textbooks that the city schools use will be written based on the national curriculum and reviewed by authorities. Educational organs in each Beijing district will announce the list of textbooks selected and determined for the students.
The teaching materials for primary and junior high schools in the city must follow the state education guidelines, it said.
Foreign textbooks will not be allowed in the teaching of primary and junior high school students, while foreign textbooks used in Beijing’s high schools must be in accordance with relevant national and municipal policies.
Such a ban was previously mentioned in a national regulation on the management of school teaching materials that China’s Ministry of Education (MOE) issued in January 2020. This regulation was believed to help improve teaching quality, build academic autonomy and protect the copyright of overseas books.
However, enforcement of the ban varied from city to city at the time, said an insider in the textbook publishing industry for primary and secondary schools surnamed Liu. He said that Guangzhou, South China’s Guangdong Province, was among the cities that implemented the ban more strictly after the MOE’s regulation came out.
Liu noted that foreign textbooks are used more in private schools for English classes. Some schools choose to use such books for students with different learning needs.
– The Daily Mail-Global Times News exchange item