It is increasingly popular for Chinese young people to share their experiences on Social media(媒体), such as the "moments"'(朋友圈)on popular instant messaging service WeChat
“I have been reading 'Jane Eyre' for 40 days with 48, 000 words finished," Li Anqi said. Li has been sharing her reading experience on WeChat moments every day since January
Working in Yinchuan, capital of Northwest China's Ningxia, Li wants to learn English very much, but cannotbare(摆脱)the daily grind(日常工作) of school lessons.
“I found many of my WeChat friends had been reading books or learning English on mobile reading apps, and I did not want to fall behind,” Li said.
In January, she spent more than 100 yuanpurchasing( 购买) an online reading class at the Bohe Reading app, which tells customers they can: “Finish reading your first English book here.”
At the reading class, teachers assign reading homework and give instructions to 430 class members every day.
A survey reportreleased(发布) on Thursday said 70.9 percent of primary and middle students in China use the Wechat instant messaging App.
At the same time, 75.9 percent of Chinese children have their own mobile phones, according to China National Children's Center.
The figures were based on a survey of nearly 9000 children across China.
However, 28.8 percent of them never read news online and 43.2 percent have never touched newspapers.
The center called for efforts to address the digital divide between urban and rural education and protect children'sprivacy(隐私) as Internet users.