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2022 m. liepos 14 d., ketvirtadienis

What could gifted teachers do when learning ceases to be valued in the country, as it is now in our Motherland?

I don't know why education stopped being valued in Lithuania. Maybe it's because Lithuania is a land of connections and serious money and influence goes only to insiders, and there is no reward for serious work in Lithuania? Write, let's think together.

"New Oriental Education & Technology Group Inc., one of China's largest private-tutoring companies until a regulatory crackdown almost crushed it last year, has become the country's latest live-streaming sensation.

Its online English classes are gone. Instead, former tutors have gained online fame in recent weeks by selling fresh produce, fish and mutton on ByteDance Ltd.'s popular short-video platform Douyin.

Under the brand Dongfangzhenxuan, translated loosely as Oriental Select, the company applies its teaching and marketing background to pitching groceries. With brief promotions of the items for sale, the teachers-turned-influencers deliver philosophical lectures, perform music and teach some English. Throughout each live stream, they drop jokes and share personal experiences, just as they did in classrooms.

Executives at New Oriental declined to comment, but the company's reinvention is an example of how companies have refashioned their businesses as political priorities change in China. Other private-education companies have shifted to making educational hardware or exploring life-science ventures. Videogame makers, another sector authorities have tried to rein in, are increasingly turning to overseas markets.

For New Oriental, which rode a boom in the private-tutoring industry after going public in 2006, the music stopped last July, when Chinese regulators banned for-profit after-school tutoring for K-9 students. The ban aimed to rein in rising education costs, which are seen as deterring couples from having more children, worsening China's gloomy demographic outlook.

The new rules sparked massive selloffs in tutoring companies' shares. Tutoring made up the majority of New Oriental's $4.3 billion revenue before Beijing's curbs. In the quarter ended Feb. 28, the company swung to a net loss, and its revenue plunged 48% from a year earlier. New Oriental laid off more than 60,000 staff members and closed more than 1,000 learning centers.

It has since shifted its focus to its remaining businesses, including test prep, as well as new initiatives like live-stream marketing.

The remaining workers had to fit new corporate strategies. In November, New Oriental's founder, Yu Minhong, announced the company's pivot to agriculture e-commerce.

The new direction didn't take off until early June, when clips of one of the company's former tutors, Dong Yuhui, teaching English expressions on a whiteboard while promoting steaks and codfish went viral on Chinese social media.

Over two weeks in June, Oriental Select's followers on Douyin jumped from 1 million to 18.5 million, and the channel booked more than $76.7 million in product sales, according to Chinese social-media data tracker New Rank. Commissions on those product sales are a primary source of revenue for Oriental Select. The company said Oriental Select doesn't get paid to advertise products.

Hundreds of thousands of viewers now tune into Oriental Select's free live streams daily, buying groceries and learning English, and it has been the top-ranking live-streaming account by popularity on Douyin since early June, according to New Rank.

For those who have taken classes with New Oriental, known for its relaxed teaching style, the storytelling and memes that wrap around each product promotion ring a bell.

"It's just the same as when my teachers would sandwich some knowledge points between jokes, and we'd be like, 'Wow, I just learned something,' " said Chen Qi, a Shanghai-based social-media influencer.

In pivoting to a new business area, New Oriental picked one that has policy support: Agriculture e-commerce aligns with Beijing's objectives of stimulating the rural economy.

"They are responding to national policies," said Xiaofei Han, a doctoral candidate at Ottawa's Carleton University who researches China's live-streaming e-commerce ecosystem." [1]

1. Chinese Tutoring Company Becomes Online Sensation
Shen, Lu. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 14 July 2022: B.4.

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