China’s former athletes recruited to teach fitness in schools with new state emphasis on exercise

Published: 
Listen to this article
  • Former top athletes are being recruited to teach sports classes as schools reduce emphasis on academic
  • The fitness revamp is aimed at capitalising on enthusiasm for sport ahead of Beijing Winter Olympics as well as concerns over existing education system’s link to obesity, nearsightedness and stress
Agence France-Presse |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

Sombre mood at Columbia University as protests continue amid Israel-Gaza war

Young Post’s sister branch, Posties, wins silver at global media awards

Faithful phrases: 9 idioms that will surely add a pious twist to your writing

Companion dogs comfort Hong Kong’s seniors through new programme

Taylor Swift’s storytelling shines in The Tortured Poets Department

Former gymnast Sui Lu teaches a gym class in Shanghai as part of China’s youth fitness drive. Photo: AFP

Petite but commanding, China’s former world champion gymnast Sui Lu stood among a sea of yoga mats doling out encouragement to her students as they bent their torsos towards their outstretched legs.

Sui was four years old when she was picked out by China’s state sports machine and began training as an elite athlete. She became world champion on the balance beam in 2011 and won silver at the London Olympics the following year.

But the pupils taking instruction from her in the bright, airy room in a Shanghai university harboured no such ambitions – Sui’s class was on basic physical fitness.

How Hong Kong’s first female professional basketball player made her dreams come true

Lessons taught by former top athletes are part of a recent government push to carve out more time for youth fitness in the world’s most populous country, as it hopes to capitalise on heightened enthusiasm for sport ahead of next month’s Beijing Winter Olympics.

“People didn’t like sports before. They were under pressure to study and didn’t have time for exercise. But now everyone values sports,” Sui told Agence France-Presse, after running her students through more stretches and balletic exercises.

The new state emphasis on exercise – schoolwork has been reduced, and targets such as a two-hour minimum of daily physical activity have been introduced – has forced a scramble to find qualified teachers.

Sui believes sport is not only for top-level competitors. Photo: AFP

That has given Sui and other ex-athletes new career options in a previously limited system.

“It’s not like before when everyone thought professional athletes could only teach other professionals after retirement,” Sui said.

She sees her mission as not about creating elite – or even middling – athletes, but to break down Chinese perceptions that sport is only for top-level competitors and a waste of time for everyone else.

Retired Paralympic fencer Benny Cheung shares how things have changed for Hong Kong’s disabled athletes

The fitness revamp is one piece of a broader Communist Party campaign to encourage healthier lifestyles that has included cracking down on industries it considers harmful distractions, such as cosmetic surgery and video gaming.

Concern has risen over the education system, geared toward rote learning, pressure-packed exams and additional after-school cramming at private tutoring businesses as anxious parents push their children to keep up.

The schooling situation has been blamed for contributing to youth obesity, nearsightedness, and rising despair over a society many young people say they increasingly view as a stressful dead-end rat race.

Primary school children taking part in a badminton class taught by former top athletes. Photo: AFP

Jiang Yujing was a member of China’s winning squad in the 2010 World Junior Badminton Championships, and now teaches the sport in Shanghai at a combined primary-middle school.

She said parents are realising that “study is not the only way” to find success.

“It’s not the same as before. Parents nowadays wouldn’t insist on tutoring at home on weekends. They hope more to follow their child’s natural instincts, and relieve their stress through sports,” she said.

Hong Kong’s star swimmer Siobhan Haughey shares her secrets to her Olympic success

One of her pupils, fourth-grader Song Xuanchun, said he and his classmates were enjoying the change in focus. “Most of my class is in better shape. Previously a lot of my classmates would often get nosebleeds or become ill, but not any more,” he said.

Mother-of-two Zhu Jing used to insist her own fourth-grader studied incessantly during off-hours.

But she said she has begun to realise that “if they study every day … their interest in or enthusiasm for learning will decrease because they will think that no matter how hard they work, they will have endless homework anyway”.

Zhu said the reduced study load this school year meant more time for pursuits such as badminton or cycling, often as a family – as well as “more exposure to natural light”.

According to Jiang (left), more parents are encouraging their children to do sports nowadays instead of attending home tuition at home on weekends. Photo: AFP

But some parents have expressed concern on Chinese blogs, speculating that the sports drive might eventually fizzle, leaving their children behind academically.

Posts suggest that many parents are still secretly pushing their kids to study just as much as before.

For now, the fitness drive shows no sign of slowing – some Chinese provinces are even tweaking entrance-test requirements for high schools and universities to increase the weighting given to sporting achievements.

Chinese authorities ban footballers from getting tattoos to set ‘good example for society’

Zhang Meng, vice-principal of a combined primary and middle school in Shanghai, said his institution already had nearly 20 physical education teachers and planned to add six more.

The school recently installed new lighting on its outdoor PE facilities to allow students to exercise well into the evening, responding to popular demand.

“From my point of view, a child who likes sports is relatively healthy physically and mentally,” Zhang said.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment