Chinese School: Loved Ones
In the last episode of the series, the whole town is gripped with the excitement of the Spring Festival which sees the passing of a new year; as the year of the pig turns to the year of the rat.
It’s a month of preparations as fireworks are bought, dumplings cooked, decorations hung, and Liu Xiang’s family even kill their pig to roast the meat. Super-student Wu Yufei comes home from university for the first time and Haiyang Middle School hold a great celebratory talent contest.
It is also a popular time for weddings and several teachers from Xiuning Middle School get hitched, revealing the schools matchmaking policy.
School radio broadcaster Zha Yujie temporally misses the fun as for her the New Year brings a different adventure. She goes to Beijing to study broadcasting - but comes up against an unforeseen problem. The Mandarin she speaks at home is considered parochial and ugly in the capital and she struggles to learn the correct pronunciation.
Back in Xiuning, preparations for the festival are all but complete, with many eagerly awaiting the return home of relatives from jobs in the cities. More often than not, it is the only time in the year when the family can be together.
But this year the people of Anhui and southern china are faced with another problem. Treacherous snow and ice storms and the worst weather in 50 years sink the province into a deep freeze and travel becomes impossible.
As the days tick by and the stranded crowds at the railway stations grow ever bigger and food prices double by the day the government begins to worry. And for many pupils, the treasured promise of seeing their parents again begins to look less than certain...
LEARN MORE:
Visit the BBC/Open University Chinese School Series Website
Visit Link's Chinese School Website
About Chinese School
There are 350 million children enrolled in further education across China, but ‘Chinese Schools’ takes as its subject one small town in rural Anhui, and focuses on the lives of a group of families, teachers and children during the course of a single academic year.
They are schools like many thousands of others across this vast nation, but through the individual stories of hardship, joy and success, an extraordinary portrait emerges of a Nation, a town and a group of children in the midst of enormous change.