The school's education targets are mainly orphans, lightly disabled teenagers and poor families. The academic system is six years, and the semester is six years. This learning cycle is formulated according to the learning difficulty, technical requirements and approval requirements of the course.
The school is purely welfare. The school is responsible for students' food, clothing, housing and transportation, as well as teachers and managers' food, clothing, housing and transportation, wages, social security and medical insurance.
The campus where students study and live is six rented Tibetan buildings, located in the Federation of Industry and Commerce Community of Ji Zha West Road, Lhasa, Tibet. The social security and surrounding environment of the community are acceptable, and the living facilities nearby are relatively complete.
The school's curriculum focuses on traditional handicrafts, while studying history and culture and understanding and appreciation of various arts, constantly improving cultural literacy and craft level, and encouraging teachers and students to use their own works to establish their due position and artistic value for Tibetan traditional culture and art in the international art world.
Majors include: traditional painting, metal sculpture, metal sculpture, hand weaving, clay sculpture, metal casting and other majors.