A group of Chinese teachers has blamed the generosity of Britain’s benefits system for lack of ambition, ill-discipline and idleness among school pupils.

They believe the option of living on welfare handouts has produced ‘feather-bedded’ teenagers prone to rudeness and disrupting the classroom rather than concentrating on working and getting ahead.

This verdict on the failings of British pupils and the influence of the welfare state was delivered by five Chinese teachers who spent four weeks in a Hampshire comprehensive school to see whether the strict methods used in China would work here.

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The Chinese teachers blamed the generosity of Britain’s benefits system for a lack of ambition, ill-discipline and idleness among school pupils

Maths teacher Zou Hailian says holding communal exercise drills trains the 'collective sense' of the students

Teachers who stand in front of a class giving instruction for up to 12 hours a day have been credited with putting Chinese schools at the top of international ratings in maths, sciences and literacy, in which the record of UK schools is mediocre.

One of the teachers, Wei Zhao, believed British pupils lacked motivation. She said: ‘Even if they don’t work, they can get money, they don’t worry about it.

‘But in China they can’t get these things so they know, “I need to study hard, I need to work hard to get money to support my family”.

‘If the British Government really cut benefits down to force people to go to work they might see things in a different way.’

Others among the Chinese teachers who took classes at Bohunt School in Liphook, Hampshire, found their group of 50 children, aged 13 and 14, were disruptive and unable to concentrate.

Li Aiyun, from Nanjing Foreign Language School, said: ‘When I handed out the homework sheets, I expected everybody to be concentrated on the homework. But when I walked in the classroom some students were chatting, some students were eating, somebody was even putting make-up on her face. I had to control myself, or I would be crazy.

‘About half of them tried their best to follow me. And the other half? Who knows what they were doing?’

Science teacher Yang Jun works children at the Hampshire school through eye exercises during class

Science teacher Yang Jun, who taught in Xian, central China, before moving to Britain, said: ‘In China we don’t need classroom management skills because everyone is disciplined by nature, by families, by society. Whereas here it is the most challenging part of teaching.’

We have one syllabus, one standard; you survive or you die. It’s up to you. Chinese teacher Yang Jun

The teacher was also puzzled by a girl who left the classroom in tears after learning that singer Zayn Malik had left the boy band One Direction.

‘I found it difficult to understand such emotional behaviour over a pop band,’ Miss Yang said.

She also questioned the use of different teaching programmes for different pupils. ‘You have different syllabuses to suit different students’ ability,’ she said. ‘We don’t. We have one syllabus, one standard; you survive or you die. It’s up to you.’

The Chinese methods are to be screened in the BBC Two documentary, Are Our Kids Tough Enough? Chinese School.

A trailer for the programme shows a teacher shouting 'listen to me', 'just use your brain' and 'no talking, no questions' at bewildered looking British children.

The teachers, who came to Britain as part of television programme aiming to show the difference between British and Chinese education, enforced a morning exercise routine in front of Chinese and Union flags

Pupils were put through their paces with hard lessons and tough PE regimes during the experiment

But the Chinese methods did not appear to impress the Bohunt head teacher, Neil Strowger.

He described the teaching techniques as ‘mind-numbingly boring’ and said usual standards of discipline at his school were not as loose as the Chinese teachers described.

‘If you visited my school in the week when cameras were not there you would not see behaviour like that,’ he said.

‘There is no low-level disruption. However, if you go into a class and do not treat the students with respect then you are going to get problems.’

Mr Strowger added: ‘I don’t believe we are somehow causing our children to fail by having a welfare state.’