China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Students, parents eagerly await results of gaokao

- By AN BAIJIE anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 9 million students across the country will face an important choice in the coming few days as education authoritie­s have begun to release the results of the annual national college entrance exam.

Under the scrutiny of their anxious parents, they have to decide on a list of universiti­es or colleges to apply for, a decision that could make a big difference in their lives.

Sixteen provinces, municipali­ties and autonomous regions have released the results of gaokao, the national college entrance exam, as of Sunday afternoon, and the rest of the results will be released by the end of Wednesday.

About 9.12 million applicants took this year’s college entrance exam, compared with 9.15 million in 2012, according to the Ministry of Education.

Stories of top winners of the exam filled the media immediatel­y after the results were released.

In Beijing, Zhu Chenzhuo, a student from the High School attached to Tsinghua University, received a score of 725, the highest mark of the municipali­ty’s science students. He has applied to Tsinghua University’s Department of Electronic Engineerin­g, sina.com. cn reported.

Zhang Yunning, from Beijing No 4 High School, finished first among the city’s art students with 695 points, the report said.

But news media should not pay too much attention to the top scorers in the exam because students’ comprehens­ive capabiliti­es are related to many factors, said Xiong Bingqi, vicepresid­ent of the 21st Century Education Research Institute in Beijing.

“A multiple-appraisal system should be establishe­d to reflect students’ comprehens­ive abilities,” he said. “The person with the highest mark may not be excellent in communicat­ing with others, socializin­g, and so on.”

About 40 percent of Chinese undergradu­ates who received the highest marks on the college entrance exams choose to study abroad, according to a survey released by the China Alumni Associatio­n.

Most Chinese students and parents believe that attending universiti­es is a prerequisi­te to securing a good job after graduation, Xiong said.

 ?? LI ZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Students and their parents crowd a promotiona­l fair of universiti­es in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Sunday, to learn more informatio­n about the universiti­es.
LI ZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Students and their parents crowd a promotiona­l fair of universiti­es in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, on Sunday, to learn more informatio­n about the universiti­es.

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