měi guó zhòng yì yuàn美国众议院tōng guò通过fǎ àn法案bǎo hù保护xué xiào学校miǎn shòu免受wài guó外国yǐng xiǎng影响
The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed three bills aimed at protecting American primary and secondary schools from the influence of the Chinese Communist Party.
These bills require schools to disclose any foreign funding they receive, especially funds from China.
If a school accepts funding from the Chinese government, it cannot receive educational funds from the U.S. government.
Parents also have the right to know whether their schools are influenced by foreign entities and can review related teaching materials.
Some U.S. schools have 'Confucius Classrooms' supported by the Chinese government, which may affect the content students learn.
Supporters of the bills believe that American schools should teach American values, not foreign ideologies.
They hope these bills will help parents and students better understand their schools and prevent foreign forces from influencing American students.
Although some lawmakers oppose these bills, arguing they increase the workload for schools, most believe protecting students is important.
Now, these bills still need to be passed by the Senate and signed by the President before becoming law.