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China compulsory dance steps wrong-foot parents
08 Jun 2007 05:27:42 GMT
Source: Reuters
BEIJING, June 8 (Reuters) - Parents in China are concerned that new rules making dancing classes compulsory at school will lead to extra fees and heighten the risk of puppy love blossoming between their children, media reports said on Friday.

An Education Ministry notice this week said seven sets of dance steps had been designed for schoolchildren of different ages to perform during class breaks or extra-curricular time.

The new programme, released in the wake of media reports about rising obesity and declining physical activity among the country's schoolchildren, had alarmed some parents, the Beijing Morning Post said, citing a report in the Shenzhen Evening News.

"Middle and primary school students mature early these days and children can easily develop curious feelings," the paper quoted a woman surnamed Wang, who fretted for her newly adolescent daughter, Xiao Meng.

"Male and female students cuddling each other every day could easily lead to issues with them developing feelings," Wang said.

"Schools adding exercises is a good thing, but the waltz is not necessary."

The programme's uniformity had also wrong-footed some parents who said schools should offer a mix of exercises to cater to different tastes and backgrounds, including martial arts and swimming, a woman surnamed Zhao suggested.

"Activities like cock-fighting and sandbag-tossing could be suitable for economically undeveloped regions," the paper quoted Zhao as saying. She said she had a son learning taekwondo who would "definitely not want to dance".
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A farmer works at a field where crop stubbles were burned, on the outskirts of Shijiazhuang, northern China's Hebei province June 15, 2007. China has issued an urgent ban on farmers burning crop stubble around the nation's capital after days of eye-watering haze that provoked complaints from national leaders.



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