Gifts do not make a teacher good
Updated: 2013-09-10 07:19
By Lisa Carducci (China Daily)
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Many parents admit gifting jewelry, imported delicacies or other expensive gifts to teachers is a kind of corruption. Such parents want to get out of the system, but how?
A mother said it is improper to give expensive gifts to teachers but she has to because other parents do so.
In private schools, however, some teachers refuse expensive gifts, perhaps because they are paid better salaries. Some private schools have even banned the gift-giving practice.
The most important thing parents should teach their children is to appreciate their teachers' contribution in their lives, for which they don't need the help of material objects. But instead of doing so, many parents have turned Teachers' Day into a game of quid pro quo.
Isn't it odd that Teachers' Day is celebrated at the beginning of the school year and not at the end, a time more appropriate to thank teachers for their yearlong work? An expensive gift at the beginning of the school year is expected to impress upon a teacher the need to pay "special attention" to a certain student. But does that always happen? Perhaps not. Since teachers get gifts from the parents of almost all their students, which student will they pay special attention to?
The first decision President Xi Jinping took after assuming office was to curb wastes and fight corruption, which includes forbidding gala banquets and expensive gifts to leaders, officials and civil servants, that is, to those who could influence other people's destiny. Since the practice had become overwhelming for many, the president's decision immediately found favor with the people.
Teachers, too, exercise a degree of power on their students. So it's time the government ended the practice of giving gifts to teachers as part of its anti-corruption drive.
The author is Canadian writer living in China.
(China Daily 09/10/2013 page9)
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