‘Be morally upright’: mother in rural China gets 2 kids into Tsinghua University and third into an elite school shares secret of raising high achievers
- One rural family in China seems to have cracked the code for getting their children into elite universities
- The family’s son has just been accepted into one of the country’s most prestigious schools, Tsinghua University, following on after his two older sisters

A farmer in rural China whose third and youngest child has just been admitted to one of China’s notoriously difficult to enter elite schools – the Tsinghua University – attributes their success to hard work – and 17-hour plus school days.
The mother, Shen Yulian, only has a primary school education, but her two older children, both girls, also went to top Chinese universities, one of which is also Tsinghua.
The eldest daughter went to Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology in 2013, the second daughter studied at Tsinghua in 2014, and their son, Liu Zhenao, was admitted to Tsinghua earlier this month.

It’s very rare for students from rural areas in China to gain admission to elite universities, let alone Tsinghua. It is one of the two most prestigious universities in China and is placed at 14 in the QS World University Rankings 2023.
But in the Shen family, who live in the village of Suqian, Jiangsu, eastern China, academic excellence appears to be in the blood.
Shen has been the primary carer for the three children over the past two decades after her husband left home as a migrant worker and only visited home infrequently.
“In terms of education for my three children, I only tell them to be honest and credible and never to steal, rob or be rude to others,” Shen told Jiangsu TV.