Hengshui High School

Coordinates: 37°43′00″N 115°42′17″E / 37.7168°N 115.7048°E / 37.7168; 115.7048
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Hebei Hengshui High School
河北衡水中学
Address
Map

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Coordinates37°43′00″N 115°42′17″E / 37.7168°N 115.7048°E / 37.7168; 115.7048
Information
TypePublic
Mottopursue excellence
(追求卓越)
Established1951
PrincipalWang Jianyong (王建勇)
Staffmore than 600
Number of studentsmore than 10,000
Websitehbhszx.cn

Hebei Hengshui High School (Chinese: 河北衡水中学) is a well-known municipal public Gaokao-preparatory high school in Hengshui, Hebei, China. It was established in 1951.

Hengshui High School is a strict-discipline school whose students must obey a strict set of rules and regulations. Students are all required to study more than 15 hours per day and almost 7 days per week.[citation needed] Nicola Davison of The Daily Telegraph wrote that "In Chinese media Hengshui High is often compared to a prison camp".[1] Alice Yan of the South China Morning Post stated that "The military-style schooling has been proven to work."[2]

As of 2015, of all existing high schools in China, Hengshui High had the highest number of students gaining admission to the highest ranked universities in Mainland China.[1] Hengshui High opened branch schools in various provinces. Parents in Zhejiang criticized the school's methods, believing they are overly harsh.[2]

Famous alumni[edit]

School life[edit]

The school regulations and activities of Hengshui High School are quite unique and have become a significant contributor to the image of the school.

Curriculum[edit]

Hengshui High School strictly enforces the curriculum for students. Students wake up at 5:30 AM every day and start housekeeping before starting running exercises at 5:40 AM on the playground. Morning reading starts after the running exercise, and breakfast is served to the students in batches at 6:30 AM. Students have early preparations for self-study after breakfast, and then they start class. Each class lasts for 40 minutes. There are five classes in the morning and a inter-class exercise during the third class. Lunch break starts from 12:45 PM to 13:45 PM, and after lunch, five classes are held in the afternoon. After the afternoon classes, each grade will have dinner, and they watch the news from 18:50 PM to 19:10 PM (under the name of "News 30 Minutes" alluding to the programme's runtime of 30 minutes). There are three lessons in the evening for self-study, ending at 21:50 PM. At 22:10 PM, students are to go to bed. The start time of each class and the two minute period before bedtime are both preparation times. An "entry status" is required, in which students are expected to follow the school's restrictive rule of conduct. For example, two minutes before the class starts, no jokes are to be made, no water is to be consumed, and two minutes before bedtime, students must lie in bed and enter a state of sleep. Under the pressure of the Hebei Provincial Department of Education, the schedule of Hengshui High School in 2022 has been adjusted to have waking times set at 6:30 AM and bedtime set at 22:30 PM. However, the daily study time of students has not been affected.

School assignment and exams[edit]

Hengshui High School students are told to "Regard self-study as exams, and regard exams as National Higher Education Entrance Examination". The curriculum has a comprehensive test every Sunday, and every month there is a large-scale research exam held with difficulty equivalent to that of the National Higher Education Entrance Examination. Both small tests and large-scale tests have students rank and class rank. School assignments and examination papers are written by teaching staff.

Holidays[edit]

During a semester, students take a vacation every two or three weeks, and the time can range from about one day in the first year to one night in the third year. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the school was closed for several months, so there were no regular holidays.

Featured Events[edit]

The special activities of Hengshui High School include the "80 Chinese mile hiking" held in the first grade, the "coming-of-age ceremony" held in the second year, and the "100 day oath of the National Higher Education Entrance Examination" held in the third year, etc.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Davison, Nicola (2015-08-15). "Revealed: the extreme revision measures taken by Chinese university hopefuls". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2018-03-16.
  2. ^ a b Yan, Alice (2017-05-26). "China's top cram school: a saviour to the poor but rejected by the rich". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2018-03-16.
  3. ^ The National Science Foundation (2006), retrieved on April 13, 2012, (in English)
  4. ^ Jie Gao's homepage at Stony Brook, retrieved on April 13, 2012
  5. ^ 燕赵 Evening News reporter Wang Haibin Wang Yechen (2004-05-19). "For the "Shenzhou" travel space--Interview with Zhou Xiyuan, director of the fifty-fourth office". Hebei Hengshui. Archived from the original on 2014-07-16. Retrieved 2014-07-01.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]