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China defuses song and dance over Peking Opera

BEIJING
Mon Feb 25, 2008 10:24pm EST
A Chinese opera singer performs at the National Grand Theatre in Beijing October 10, 2007. A program launched in China to teach traditional Peking opera in schools has drawn criticism from some Internet users who said untrained teachers and forced instruction might put off students from the 200-year-old art. REUTERS/Claro Cortes IV

BEIJING (Reuters) - China has made clear that a pilot program teaching traditional Peking Opera in schools would not be compulsory after it drew criticism from Internet users who said forced instruction would turn students off.

Music

China's Education Ministry said classic and modern Peking Opera pieces added to the music curriculum at 200 schools in 10 provinces for the new semester in March were only "a promotional course" to help students better appreciate Chinese culture.

"The opera classes are by no means a nationwide compulsory class, but pilot programs implemented in certain schools from March to July," Xinhua news agency quoted Education Ministry spokesman Wang Xuming as saying.

Wang said the program was still under trial and his ministry would solicit opinions from all circles.

The course had drawn fire from some Internet users, and media commentaries had questioned how music teachers, themselves untrained in Peking Opera, would educate students in the complex gestures and trilling vocals.

Chinese education authorities have been criticized for other attempts to give students' a broader scope of learning.

Parents in Zhengzhou, capital of China's central province of Henan, had voiced concerns that a compulsory course teaching children "Shaolin boxing" -- a martial art created by the region's famous Shaolin Temple -- might lead to children becoming more violent, Tuesday's China Daily said.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Nick Macfie)



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