Campus talents
It is not just security guards in campus that have an extra appetite for study. Campuses are now seeing a diversified range of workers hitting the books.
"A waitress in our canteen had graduated from high school but was admitted to the Beijing Institute of Technology after study," said Zuo Rong, a deputy director of a canteen in the Beijing-based Renmin University of China.
Zuo Rong told the Global Times on Monday that campus staff, including waiters and security guards, could pick up good study habits if immersed in such an atmosphere.
Back in 2004, a cook in Tsinghua University scored 630 points in the TOEFL examination, sparking hot discussion among students. They joked that students shouldn't overlook a doorman, a cook or a waiter in the campus for they may already scored higher in the tests than the students.
Wang Cong, a freshman at Renmin University told the Global Times that earlier this month when she chatted with a doorman, she found out he was very ambitious in study. "He asked me questions like how to study English and if I knew any place to study after work."
Wang said she was moved by that spirit, adding that classes nowadays need to see this kind of diversity. "If a school welcomes its staff to study, it shows its own tolerance."
Opening up schools
Experts say the phenomenon shows weaknesses in the existing system. China's universities have become more sharply divided by wealth and class in recent years, with the percentage of rural students drastically falling.
Hu Xingdou, a professor from the Beijing Institute of Technology told the Hebei-based Yanzhao Metropolis Daily on Saturday that university should be open and embracing in the first place.
"Now the university allows its staff to audit classes and get diplomas, and in the future it should be more open," Hu said an ideal situation is to welcome any citizen to attend classes if they want. "And the most important thing is to open the school's library."
Wang Pan, a commentator from the Henan Business Daily commented on his Sina Weibo account that "As the Internet provides great convenience for all-round knowledge, people can learn at any time, any place, in any situation. Why does it have to be security guards in Peking University?"
The Xinhua News Agency on Monday pointed out that the story raises another question; how can the university make its educational resources and opportunities more open to the public?
"Everyone should enjoy an equal opportunities to learn," Xinhua commented.
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