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Tired, stressed and 'fed up'

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Vast numbers of teachers are suffering mental and physical health problems due to the intense pressure heaped on them by students, parents and school officials, education experts have warned.

Children from a kindergarten in Huaibei, Anhui province, present handmade cards on Thursday to their teachers for the upcoming Teachers' Day.

Children from a kindergarten in Huaibei, Anhui province, present handmade cards on Thursday to their teachers for the upcoming Teachers' Day.

Studies show that potentially thousands of teachers are already at breaking point, while many are quitting the classroom every year.

"I just want to lock myself in a quiet room and hide," said Tao Ling, an exasperated teacher at Changchun No 45 Middle School in Jilin province, ahead of Friday's Teachers' Day celebrations. "My husband says that if I continue to teach he'll go crazy as I often take out my anger on him."

Statistics compiled by the National Primary and Secondary School Mental Health Discussion Group in 2005, which is so far the most authoritative data, found almost half of the teachers involved suffered a mild or moderate mental illness.

About 2 percent had even received medical treatment for emotional distress, said organizers, who interviewed 2,292 teachers at 168 primary and secondary schools in Liaoning province.

A separate poll of more than 1,300 teachers across 13 districts of Shanghai last September also discovered that one-third were "fed up" and regretted joining the profession, according to the Shanghai Academy of Educational Sciences.

The situation is so serious, say experts, that if the authorities do not act quickly to relieve the pressure, it could have a disastrous effect on the development of China's students.

"I got on well with my students and won several prizes (for my work) but, to be honest, I just couldn't cope," said Shi Honglin, who left teaching last year after eight years at Yanqing No 3 Middle School in Beijing. He is now a magazine journalist.

"Teaching took up all my time; morning and evening studies, lessons in the afternoon," said the 35-year-old. "I only got half a day off a week and I hardly saw my daughter. I wanted a new life."

Although the workload took its toll, Shi said it was the "obsession with exam scores" that really drove him away.

"Not every student can be top of the class and you can't just judge excellence on exam results. School officials and parents don't seem to see that," he said. "When students fail a test, it's the teachers that come under attack, from all sides, regardless of how devoted they are."

Today, it is not only the students who sweat over exam results but also teachers and school principals.

Even though education departments do not use scores to rate schools and ban principals from announcing class rankings after exams, such information is still compiled informally and often distributed among teachers and parents.

Officials of schools lagging behind in these rankings not only face embarrassment but could also see an effect on future enrollment, which is closely connected to the amount of funding a school receives from the authorities.

With so much riding on results, principals pass on this pressure to teachers on the frontline.

"In a way, the rankings and students' scores have become the key criteria for schools and parents to evaluate the capability of a teacher," said Gan Yuan, principal of Changchun No 125 Junior Middle School. "We don't want to but the education system forces us to do that."

He admitted, however, that the strain often proves too much.

"We called the 120 emergency hotline for ambulances several times last semester," added Gan. "It's common for teachers to suddenly collapse while giving classes."

Psychological warfare

Even teachers whose students consistently perform well are not spared the intense scrutiny. Tao teaches 50 children in Changchun and her class is considered to be the best in the school.

Yet, all it has done, she said, has raised the expectations of parents even further.

"Many people say it's an honor to be so highly regarded but, for me, it means day after day of exhausting work," the 52-year-old told China Daily. "I have great difficulty sleeping at night after I finish marking homework and preparing for the next day's class.

"My home telephone is like an emergency hotline for concerned parents," she said, adding that she once spent three hours answering calls.

Most schools also adhere to a policy of "transparent teaching", which means officials and parents can observe classes whenever they choose.

"At least two parents come and sit at the back of my classroom every day," said Luo Jing, 29, who teaches English in Changchun. "I have taught the same textbooks for six years but still I'm nervous whenever I see them staring directly at me."

Students are also fueling the increase in stress, with teachers now engaged in psychological warfare with what experts claim is the most uncommunicative generation there has ever been.

A large proportion of China's school children are from single-child families and, in Luo's experience, that means they are "self-centered and rebellious" and "vulnerable to even the smallest hardship or setback".

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