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Heilongjiang has taken the lead nationally in establishing a statistical monitoring system for the ice and snow economy this year. Over the past few months, the provincial bureau of statistics collected and sorted data related to the sector with the coordination of departments in taxation, cultural tourism, sports, transportation, agriculture and rural areas and industry and information.
The bureau also carried out a survey on more than 200 key tourism projects in seven categories in the province, including major scenic spots, shopping districts, ice and snow amusement parks, ski resorts, museums, cultural and art galleries, morning and night markets, involving nearly 40,000 business entities.
"The data fully reflected the development results of Heilongjiang as the place to practice the idea that 'ice and snow are also are invaluable assets'," said Yan Huijun, deputy head of the bureau.
The purpose of establishing the statistical monitoring system in the province is to better provide decision-making reference points for promoting the development of the ice and snow economy, Yan said.
With its abundant ice and snow resources, Heilongjiang has successfully cultivated well-known ice and snow tourism brands such as Harbin Ice-Snow World and "Snow Town" in recent years.
China has unveiled an ambitious plan to develop its ice and snow economy as a new economic driver, targeting a total market size of 1.2 trillion yuan by 2027 and 1.5 trillion yuan by 2030, according to a guideline released by the State Council in 2024.
Source: Xinhua 2025-03-13 23:53:15
Speaking to the media on Friday after attending a meeting at the city’s legislature, Hong Kong Secretary for Health Lo Chung-mau revealed on Friday that the costs of complex imaging tests, currently fully funded by the government, may have to be partially borne by patients.
Lo said that the per-item costs would only apply to outpatient services, not to emergency services or inpatient treatments; patients will still be able to receive examinations free of charge in urgent situations.
Local media reported on Friday that the government is expected to unveil a plan for adjusting public healthcare fees in the coming weeks.
Due to increasing demand, waiting times have become longer, creating issues of overuse, Lo said — adding that the move to introduce charges is intended to ensure there can be more precise targeting of subsidies to those in genuine need.
Lo said that the authorities are seeking ways to ensure there is a more precise allocation of resources, especially for medical services that are heavily subsidized by the government, and are taking into account the costs of the services, the contributions that patients may reasonably be expected to make, priorities in the use of resources, and residents' financial capabilities.
He said that amid the adjustment process, the government's commitment to healthcare will remain unchanged, and any additional revenue generated from fee adjustments will be entirely reinvested into medical services.
Lo said he believes that the new outpatient service charges will encourage patients to consult their family doctor as a first step, rather than immediately seek a medical consultation with a specialist in a hospital.
Local media reports suggest that the government will announce these adjustments in the coming weeks, including reforms to emergency room charges, with the objective of directing resources toward individuals with greater needs, such as critical care and cancer patients.
Source: China Daily by Stephy Zhang in Hong Kong
This project marks the first cross-sea bridge in Northeast China to be constructed using a new mechanism of cooperation between the government and social capital.
The bid was won by a consortium led by China State Construction Engineering Corp, which is responsible for overall investment, construction, and operation.
The bridge spans a total length of 25.5 kilometers, with a 6.5-km land segment and a 19-km sea segment.
It will incorporate modern construction techniques and new green low-carbon technologies, featuring four-lane roadways with a designed speed of 80 km per hour.
Changhai county is the only island border county in China, renowned for its natural fishing resources and delicious seafood.
However, various natural factors such as tides, strong winds and fog limit maritime transportation in the area for over 60 days each year, hindering travel of the residents and significantly impacting activities like healthcare and emergency response on the islands.
"The construction of the bridge will put an end to this once and for all," said Yu Jingxu, deputy head of Changhai. "Upon completion, the bridge will enable 24-hour rapid travel between the land and islands, freeing residents from the constraints of wind and waves for travel, and boosting goods transportation, and industrial development," he said.
Yu believes that the bridge will serve as an important economic artery for the high-quality development of Changhai, promoting the integration of culture, sports and tourism to enhance the quality of the Changshan Archipelago tourism resort.
Xiong Maoping, Party chief of Dalian, said that as China's largest land-island road project under construction, the Changhai cross-sea bridge is a foundational project to drive high-quality development of the marine economy and improve the production and living conditions of the islands' residents.
Xiong highlighted that Dalian has actively seized national policy opportunities in recent years, striving to secure projects and stabilize investments.
In the first quarter, the city initiated and resumed construction on 1,392 projects with a planned annual investment of 103.85 billion yuan. Among these, 242 were newly initiated projects, with over 60 percent being industrial projects.
Source: By Zhang Xiaomin in Dalian, Liaoning | China Daily | Updated: 2025-03-13 09:01
Published in the top-tier linguistics journals System and Computer Assisted Language Learning, the research underscores the importance of structured handwriting instruction in Chinese language education. The landmark study was a collaboration between researchers at Tianjin Normal University and the University at Albany-State University of New York.
Immediate and delayed tests showed that participants who followed the correct stroke order performed significantly better in their writing with accuracy and speed, character recognition and long-term memory retention, according to lead researcher Yu Miao, a professor in the department of psychology at Tianjin Normal University.
The research tracked 43 Chinese-as-a-second-language learners from 15 countries with the help of a computer-assisted learning system. Participants were divided into three groups: one practicing correct stroke order, another following random stroke order and a third receiving no stroke order.
Test results showed that participants in the first group recognized and wrote characters 15 percent faster than those in the other two groups. Their memory retention of characters was also significantly longer. The study further indicated that recognition accuracy could increase by 20 percent when writing accuracy improved by 30 percent.
"Stroke order is more than a writing convention. It helps create cognitive scaffolding for the decomposition and reconstruction of Chinese characters," Yu said.
The study provides strong empirical support for stroke order instruction and offers insights into the development of intelligent Chinese learning tools. The research team constructed a dynamic stroke visualization system that breaks down Chinese characters into animated stroke sequences, helping learners visualize and replicate the correct writing process more easily. The system also records learners' behavioral data and tracks improvements in writing accuracy, speed and memory retention.
The research highlights the challenges faced by second language learners in writing Chinese characters, which are logographic and structurally complex. Many students struggle with rote copying methods, which fail to provide meaningful learning connections.
"Rote copying is not effective because learners only retain fragmented images of Chinese characters, which is not helpful for long-term memory," said co-author Sun Hui of Tianjin Normal University. "By contrast, our structured stroke practice helps build a durable mental model for recognizing and using hanzi — Chinese characters."
Foreign students who participated in the study reported noticeable improvements after learning stroke order systematically.
"Before learning stroke order, my writing was inconsistent, and I found characters difficult to remember," said Otieno Innocent Omondi, a graduate student from Kenya. "Stroke order makes my writing easier. It's like a roadmap — it tells me where to start and how to complete each hanzi properly."
For Supakchanad Chookan, a Thai student at Tianjin Normal University, structured handwriting practice made a difference in her learning attitude and strategies.
"Since practicing structured handwriting, I have made fewer mistakes in my homework and feel more confident in writing," she said.
Based on their findings, researchers advocate for integrating stroke order instruction into Chinese-as-a-second-language curricula, incorporating dynamic learning tools with real-time feedback and designing handwriting practices tailored to different proficiency levels.
"Many believe typing alone is sufficient for learners who want to write in Chinese, but our research proves otherwise," Yu said. "Typing activates different cognitive processes compared with handwriting. Proper stroke order builds learners' procedural memory and reinforces long-term retention and comprehension."
To further verify their findings, Yu and his team plan to use functional magnetic resonance imaging — a method of visualizing brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow — to explore how stroke order training activates language processing areas in the brain.
Source: By Yang Cheng in Tianjin | China Daily | Updated: 2025-03-04 08:57
According to the reserve, this behavior had never before been recorded.
"We have never observed golden monkeys on sheer cliffs before," said volunteer Wu Yihong, whose footage shows the monkeys moving with surprising ease against a 1,100-meter-high backdrop.
These rare primates, which are endemic to China and classified as first-level national protected animals, inhabit high-altitude, dense forests.
Source: By Liu Kun in Wuhan | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-03-13 15:39
A total of 738 million trips were recorded in January and February, marking a 6.4 percent increase compared to the same period last year and hitting a new high, the National Railway Administration said Friday.
High-speed rail played a key role with 544 million trips taking place in this period, accounting for 73.8 percent of the total.
As an occasion for family reunions, the Spring Festival, which fell on Jan. 29 this year, leads to a 40-day travel rush often referred to as the world's largest annual human migration.
The administration also said that the country's fixed-asset investment in the railway sector in the first two months of 2025 totaled 68.5 billion yuan (9.55 billion U.S. dollars), up 5.1 percent year on year.
Source: Xinhua 2025-03-14 15:06:15
The sector's total revenue expanded 30.4 percent year on year to 99.1 billion yuan (about 13.81 billion U.S. dollars) last month, according to the bureau.
For the postal industry, the total delivery volume climbed 50.9 percent year on year to 14.98 billion packages, and its revenue edged up 24.9 percent to 122.62 billion yuan.
"Driven by the low-base effect from last year's Spring Festival, the postal industry's key indicators saw high year-on-year growth in February this year," the bureau said.
In the first two months of 2025, China's courier sector handled 28.48 billion parcels, up 22.4 percent year on year. The sector generated revenues of 221.04 billion yuan during this period, marking an increase of 11.2 percent year on year.
Source: Xinhua 2025-03-14 17:00:16
The first flight from Chengdu, capital of southwest China's Sichuan Province, will land at the Pokhara International Airport on March 18, and the airport shall have the first regular charter flight after it came into operation in January 2023, Wang Xin, a counsellor at the Chinese Embassy in Nepal, said on Wednesday at a press conference in Pokhara.
The charter flight shall be operated once a week on Tuesdays.
The move is important progress in strengthening connectivity between China and Nepal, and will certainly further strengthen personnel exchanges and cooperation in various fields, as 2025 marks the 70th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries, Wang said.
Source: Xinhua 2025-03-12 19:47:45
This award reflects the widespread recognition of the airport's exceptional service by domestic and international passengers. It adds to the reputation of China's aviation industry, said Qingdao International Airport Group, which operates the airport.
The ACI's annual Airport Service Quality awards are globally recognized for celebrating excellence in customer experience. They are based on data collected from ACI's renowned Departures and Arrivals Surveys, which measure passenger satisfaction across various aspects of airport operations, according to the official ACI website.
Qingdao Airport has streamlined its check-in deadlines to enhance travel convenience, relaxing them to 40 minutes for domestic flights and 50 minutes for international flights before departure.
Additionally, the airport has introduced six "premium" services, including upgraded signage, priority check-in, and expedited security screening. For "express flights", the check-in deadline has been further relaxed to 38 minutes before departure, while passengers without checked luggage can check in as late as 35 minutes before departure. To meet passenger needs better and ensure a smooth travel experience, over 340 signs related to check-in, security, customs, retail and baggage claim have been reviewed and optimized.
In 2024, the Qingdao Airport handled 193,000 flights, 26.18 million passengers and 279,000 metric tons of cargo. These figures represent year-on-year growths of 13 percent, 22 percent and 7 percent, respectively, marking historic highs since the airport's opening.
Source: By Zhao Ruixue | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-03-13 17:18
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