BEIJING, Sept. 3 (Xinhua) -- Despite the lives lost and schools ruined,
areas hit by the May 12 earthquake in southwest China resumed classes on Monday
with enough teachers, the Ministry of Education said on Wednesday.
"The central government has adopted measures to provide teachers for the
quake zone," said Song Yonggang, vice-director of the ministry's teacher
education bureau.
With the support of central financial allocations, more than 900 people
were recruited to work in hard-hit areas in Sichuan, Shaanxi and Gansu
provinces, he said.
Sichuan set up a personnel databank, which helped move teachers to the
areas where they were needed most.
Provinces and regions outside the disaster zone also helped, he said. For
example, Shanghai sent more than 60 teachers on one-year voluntary assignments
to the quake-hit areas in Sichuan.
"The problem now lies not in the number of teachers but in their physical
and psychological recovery and the provision of professional training," he said.
The ministry plans to give professional training to all teachers in the
worst-hit areas by the autumn 2009 semester, according to the official.
The 39 worst-hit districts or counties now have about 105,000 teachers, the
ministry's statistics showed.
All 3.4 million students in the Sichuan quake zone, except those in areas
hit by Saturday's 6.1-magnitude quake, returned to school on Monday, according
to the provincial education authority.
About 33 percent of students returned to their former schools, which were
unaffected in the earthquake, while 38 percent returned to buildings that had
been reinforced and 28.4 percent were studying in prefabricated classrooms.
The May 12 earthquake killed more than 69,000 people with nearly 18,000
still missing.