Educators and medical workers are alarmed about the increasingly high proportion of students suffering stress and depression, saying that the problem is due to parental pressure and excessive homework.
Surveys conducted recently have all led to the same finding: that the number of students with psychological problems has increased rapidly.
The latest survey, carried out by the Da Nang Mental Health Hospital through the internet and direct interviews at three high schools in the city, showed that 20 percent of male students suffered psychological disorders. The figure was 10 percent for girls.
The survey said that pressure put on students and the amount of school work had contributed to the problems.
Though the survey was conducted in Da Nang, analysts believe the high percentage of students with psychological problems is a common problem in all big cities in Vietnam.
Experts said students who were interviewed for the survey had said their parents were putting undue pressure on them.
Hoang The Anh, a 10th grader, told interviewers that he was afraid of his parents.
“Why did you get an 8 on the test, while the other classmates got 9 and 10?” was one question that his parents had asked, Anh said.
Anh said they would also say “You have three meals a day, but a you only get bad mark. The other children go to school with an empty stomach, but they still can learn better.”
The “bad mark” was 8/10, which, according to the current marking scale, means “good”. To satisfy his parents, Anh needs to get 9 or 10, the marks given to excellent work.
What if Anh had received a 10? He would not be scolded by his mother but he would not receive compliments, either. “My mother is very sparing with her praise. She believes that it is my duty to get 10 marks on all work,” Anh said.
Hospital admission
Hong Anh, an office worker in Hanoi, said she was one of the few parents who had not set such high requirements on her children. She explained that her father, who is a psychiatry professor, had seen many excellent students end up in the hospital.
“A neighbor beat his son just because the son failed the entrance exam for a class for the gifted at a local school, while the other children in the same residential quarter passed the exam,” she said.
“All parents want their children to become talents, while forgetting that many are not,” she continued.
A report from the HCM City Mental Hospital showed that in 2011 it received 25,000 patients who were children of school age (aged 3-15). The figure rose to 28,000 in 2012 and 32,000 in 2013.
Other News
- 2024 International Youth Festival attracts 3,000 local and international youth
- Hanoi launches pilot project to integrate electronic health records into VNeID app
- Empowering new generation of biodiversity champions in Vietnam
- Capital Law to make Hanoi major center for quality education
- Hanoi raises road safety awareness among students
- Hanoi pilots artificial intelligence in five schools
- Modern pediatric hospital opens in Hanoi
- Hanoi works towards UNESCO City of Learning
- Hanoi to protect children against measles, rubella
- Hanoi works on cleanup, disease prevention after Typhoon Yagi
Trending
-
North-South high-speed railway to open up new economic opportunities
-
Hanoi sees citizen satisfaction as measure of administrative reform success
-
Hanoi's businesses place focus on digital transformation
-
Experiencing ingenious spaces at the Hanoi Creative Design Festival 2024
-
Hanoi Festival of Creative Design 2024: celebrating the capital's cultural innovation
-
Expatriate workforce in Hanoi: Growth engine requring thorough administration
-
Ethnic minorities want more policies for socio-economic improvement
-
From tradition to trend: How modern approaches spark cultural pride in Vietnam's Gen Z
-
Hanoi works to make bus system greener