The National Education Research Institute drew up the 12 national education master program, and the compulsory credits of some subjects were greatly reduced, which triggered protests. The National Institute of Education held a press conference yesterday (5th) to make it clear that in the future, senior high school students should take at least 24 credits for Chinese, 24 credits for English and 0/6 credits for Mathematics, which is no less than the current 99 curriculum. After high school, it is necessary to offer more courses suitable for students of different levels, and running classes will become the norm.
How to arrange classes is a headache for schools.
"I don't know how to arrange classes in the future? Chen Jinzhen, president of Huajiang High School in Taipei, said that it is a great challenge for teachers to offer more elective courses in the future because of their limited professional knowledge. In recent years, the school's software and hardware can't keep up, and there will be problems in running classes.
She also questioned that the admission of university stars attached great importance to the academic performance of high school students. 12 after the implementation of the national education curriculum, the courses learned by high school students are very different, some are simple versions and some are in-depth versions. If you can't put forward a fair calculation method of grades, it may cause controversy when you enter the university.
Last June, the National Institute of Education began to draft the 12 National Education Outline. After more than 100 revisions, the Save Chinese Education Alliance and Ke Wenfeng, president of Cheng Dali University, both accused the previous version of drastically reducing the required credits of Chinese and mathematics, which may affect students' competitiveness. The National Institute of Education will put the latest version of the master's program on its website for public comments.
The syllabus is publicly evaluated online.
The draft 12 national education syllabus formulated by the National Institute of Education has been sent to the curriculum review meeting of the Ministry of Education for review and is expected to be published in August. After that, the subject outline was formulated and finalized in February 105; The new curriculum will be implemented from 107. Ceng Shijie, vice president of the National Education Research Institute, said that the number of required classes in Chinese, English and mathematics will not decrease in the future, but it is normal for schools to offer courses suitable for students at different levels.