Web opens world for young Chinese, but erodes respect

Christian Science Monitor: Web opens world for young Chinese, but erodes respect

Armed with outside ideas and information, teens are challenging their teachers. And some schools welcome it.

Beijing – Excited and emboldened by the wealth of information they find on the Internet, Chinese teens are breaking centuries of tradition to challenge their teachers and express their own opinions in class.

Wearing jerseys emblazoned with the names of European soccer stars, downloading weekly episodes of "Prison Break," listening to 50 Cent, and reading Japanese comic books, China's current high school generation is plugging itself directly into international culture.

And it's giving the kids ideas. Ideas that could one day transform the way this country is governed.

"The Internet has given Chinese children wings," says Sun Yun Xiao, vice president of the China Youth and Children Research Center.

Many are using those wings to fly in the face of received wisdom about how and what they should learn, and about how much respect they owe to authority. "Today students ask you, 'Why?' And if you don't have a good answer, they won't necessarily accept what you say," says Zhao Hongxia, a young teacher at a private school in Beijing. "In my day, if the teacher said something he was always right."

The "post-90" generation of Chinese youngsters, named for the year the eldest of them was born, is "very different" from its predecessors, says Tony Hu, a Beijing high school student who has just turned 18. "We have far more ways to get information," he explains. "The generation before us knew nothing about anything except studying." …


Comments

2 responses to “Web opens world for young Chinese, but erodes respect”

  1. I gues we’re buying into the Chinese government myth about being open. There used to be a site called The Great Firewall of China which showed how the Chinese government had banned many websites from reaching their people. It’s now been bought over by the same government and no longer exists.
    Western culture may be dying, but Chinese freedom is being aborted.

  2. I’m not ready to count China out. This stuff tends to happen in ebbs and flows. I still have the impression that overall the freedom tide is coming in for China.

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