Los Angeles Times

S. Korean students are put to the test

Nearly 500,000, even those with COVID- 19, take crucial national exam, pandemic or no.

- By Victoria Kim

SEOUL — For eight hushed hours Thursday, a second- f loor hospital room at the Mokpo City Medical Center at the southweste­rn tip of South Korea is being transforme­d into a test center — not for the coronaviru­s, but for admission to college.

Five hospital beds have been wheeled out, making way for a lone school desk. Nurses clad head- to- toe in white protective suits, goggles and masks are taking turns serving as proctors. At the center of it all is an 18year- old high school senior with the coronaviru­s, taking the most important exam of her lifetime.

South Korea is forging ahead with its annual nationwide college entrance exam despite unease over rising coronaviru­s infection rates. Nearly half a million students are taking the test Thursday as the country grapples with a third wave of COVID- 19 cases, with daily infections hovering around 500 in recent weeks.

In a hyper- competitiv­e society where college admission is seen as predetermi­ning many facets of one’s life, including job, income and social status, the exam is a tense affair even in a typical year. Companies delay their workers’ commute so students can get to test centers on time, the stock market pushes back its opening bell by an hour, and planes stop taking off so as to not interfere with listening- comprehens­ion sections.

Add to the mix a raging pandemic, and you have a nation on edge about

whether the test is putting students, their families and the entire country at risk and whether the seniors will get a fair shot at the high- stakes exam. The coronaviru­s has wreaked havoc on their academic calendars and caused outbreaks in several of the country’s myriad cram schools, where students spend long hours in test prep.

“It’s such a big turning point in life. How you do on this exam really changes your future,” said Yang, a 20year- old test taker who asked to be identified only by her last name. “The psychologi­cal pressure is immense.”

Among those taking the exam Thursday are 35 students who have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, as well as an additional 387 who are being required to isolate after coming into contact with a known COVID patient, according to the Ministry of Education. They are taking the exam at two dozen hospitals around the country, including the one in Mokpo, or separate test centers for those in quarantine, with no more than four students per room, officials said.

Yang, who is taking the annual test a third time for a shot at a higher- ranked university than the one she got into last year, recalled beforehand how nerve- racking the test day was in her first two attempts. She said she couldn’t imagine having to take it in a hospital room.

“This is an unpreceden­ted situation for the students, the schools, the parents. Everyone is anxious,” she said.

High school seniors aren’t the only ones whose futures have been jeopardize­d by the challenges of holding large- scale exams in the midst of the COVID- 19 pandemic.

A cluster of infections last month at a cram school for teacher qualificat­ion exams resulted in 67 aspiring teachers being barred from the test, which many spend several years preparing for. Would- be accountant­s protested after test administra­tors announced that anyone with COVID- 19 would not be allowed to take an upcoming certificat­ion exam this month. Earlier this year, a local developmen­t corporatio­n in the city of Ansan held its employment exam for job applicants in a soccer f ield so as to have an open- air environmen­t with ample space between test- takers.

The pandemic has helped highlight the extent to which South Koreans hang their hopes on highpressu­re exams to determine their future prospects. Job seekers spend years preparing for public service exams for coveted government jobs. Major corporatio­ns including Samsung and LG rely on exams to weed out applicants, spawning an in

dustry of cram schools and prep books tailored specifical­ly to their exams. Both companies conducted their tests online this year because of the pandemic.

“South Korea has way too many exams, and especially high- stakes exams where everything is decided on that one day,” said Kim Kihun, a senior fellow at the National Youth Policy Institute. “The fact that it’s going forward even in this extraordin­ary COVID- 19 situation — that shows you how deeprooted it is.”

At Thursday’s grueling all- day college entrance exam, students are required to wear masks throughout, with plastic dividers separating their desks.

South Korean President Moon Jae- in said the exam was even more of a challenge than the general elections the country held in April because it involves students, proctors and support staff — about 610,000 people, all told — spending the entire day in a confined space.

“The degree of risk and nervousnes­s is much higher,” Moon said.

One student taking the test said Tuesday that she has been doing practice exams with a mask, but found it challengin­g because it kept shifting her glasses.

Her mother has been attending daily prayers at church for her daughter’s sake. The girl had been spending more than 15 hours a day at an expensive cram school, but two of the students there tested positive for the coronaviru­s, leading the school to be shut down while everyone who was in contact was tested.

“Getting one question right or wrong can make the difference in which school you get into,” said the girl, Cho, who also asked to be identified only by her last name.

She said she hoped to get into a top- tier university to study engineerin­g.

At the Mokpo medical center, two students with mild cases of COVID- 19 had initially been scheduled to take their exams, but one was discharged with two days to go, said hospital administra­tor Kim O- cheon.

The remaining student is doing well with virtually no symptoms and seemed to be calmly preparing on the eve of the exam despite the unusual environs, he said Wednesday.

 ?? Ahn Young- j oon Associated Press ?? WORKERS disinfect a classroom in Seoul two days before South Korea’s college entrance test Thursday.
Ahn Young- j oon Associated Press WORKERS disinfect a classroom in Seoul two days before South Korea’s college entrance test Thursday.
 ??  ?? A TEST TAKER prays before the all- day exam. “Getting one question right or wrong can make the difference in which school you get into,” one student said.
A TEST TAKER prays before the all- day exam. “Getting one question right or wrong can make the difference in which school you get into,” one student said.
 ?? Photog r aphs by Kim Hong- j i Pool Photo ?? STUDENTS await the start of South Korea’s college entrance exam in Seoul. Masks are required, and dividers separate the test takers.
Photog r aphs by Kim Hong- j i Pool Photo STUDENTS await the start of South Korea’s college entrance exam in Seoul. Masks are required, and dividers separate the test takers.

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