Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Penalty Regulations of the Ministry of Education for Making Up Lessons

Penalty Regulations of the Ministry of Education for Making Up Lessons

The Ministry of Education’s penalty provisions for making up classes are as follows:

Ministry of Education: “One-to-one” illegal training can result in a maximum fine of 100,000 yuan.

The "Measures" stipulate that natural persons, legal persons or other organizations carry out off-campus training in a disguised form, conduct paid off-campus training through instant messaging, online conferences, live broadcast platforms, etc., or use residential buildings, hotels, coffee shops and other places to organize paid off-campus training such as "one-to-one" and "one-to-many", or to carry out paid off-campus training in the name of consulting, cultural communication, etc.

The off-campus training department of the local people's government at or above the county level, together with other relevant departments, shall order corrections, refund the fees charged, and issue a warning or notice of criticism; if the circumstances are serious, a fine of not more than 50,000 yuan shall be imposed; if the circumstances are particularly serious, , a fine of not less than 50,000 yuan but not more than 100,000 yuan will be imposed. In-service teachers in primary and secondary schools who participate in illegal off-campus training will be severely punished.

The relevant person in charge of the Ministry of Education stated in the Q&A session with reporters that the paid invisible mutation training in subjects without approval has risks in the safety of the training environment, the risk of harm to the training content, and "exceeds the standards and exceeds the outline" and violates the laws of education. There are various hidden dangers such as risks, risks of employees infringing on students, and risks of "difficulty in refunding fees." "Therefore, the issue of invisible mutation training must be rectified as an important part of consolidating the results of off-campus training governance, and it must be resolutely cracked down in accordance with the law."