Chinese Communist Party (CCP) inspectors have told 31 of China’s top universities to step up ideological training and political indoctrination among staff and students.
The CCDI chastised some universities for “weak political and ideological education,” noting they had failed to follow the CCP’s education policies.
China has instituted five political theory classes in college so far, teaching both communism and thoughts of party leaders like Mao Zedong and Xi Jinping. These courses are compulsory for all majors.
The CCP watchdog has required universities to study Xi’s theory in-depth and ramp up political education.
It demanded that party cadres “understand and follow” Xi’s theories and the CCP’s orders, take a leadership role in college governance, and tighten the Party control over colleges, according to the CCDI website.
All universities have party cadres working as liaisons between the school and the CCP.
The regulator added that the rectification results will play a crucial role in evaluating the work of party cadres. The agency threatened that it will hold party officials accountable if they fail to implement the new measures.
CCP mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the regulator had been investigating the Ministry of Education and the 31 colleges since May. The CCDI sent 15 special working teams to the top universities, including Peking University, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and Fudan University.
Student Complaints
A recent graduate from Peking University told The Epoch Times on Aug. 25 that students have complained about heavy political courses.“At the beginning, the course, ‘Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics in the New Era,’ was an elective course in some colleges,” the graduate surnamed Wu said. “But the class was almost canceled in many colleges, such as Peking University, due to low enrollment.”
“It shows the young generation doesn’t have strong admiration for Xi and lacks interest in his ideology,” Wu said.
However, with recent changes, the course has become compulsory in universities since the beginning of the fall semester.
The Ministry of Education said the course aims to strengthen the “resolve to listen to and follow the Party.”
Wu added that examinations in those political courses changed to closed-book tests. The heavy workload has only led to students’ further dissatisfaction, he noted.
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