China Daily

Applicants to art college majors face challenges due to pandemic

- Gaokao gaokao gaokao

BEIJING — If it was not for the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s, Li Haiyi would have already received confirmati­on letters from some of the Chinese art colleges that he had applied to. But right now, he is making video clips on exam assignment­s given online by the art schools.

The Ministry of Education issued a notice in March asking the country’s colleges and universiti­es to use off-site methods to examine applicants for art majors for their profession­al skills. The move is to prevent any large-scale gathering and flow of people during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Normally, the art schools arrange independen­t on-site exams to appraise the applicants’ profession­al potential, before the annual national college entrance exam, known as in Chinese.

“I had booked tickets in advance for on-site exams at the schools that I had applied to, but they have changed their admission rules. I won’t make the trips. The schools admit either on scores without having on-site exams or require us to create videos as an examinatio­n via online platforms,” says Li.

He applied to major in photograph­y, film and television production and visual communicat­ions at a number of art colleges and universiti­es in Beijing as well as Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces.

He says the change in rules brought more uncertaint­ies to his college dream. “I feel rushed to comply with the new admission rules. I should prepare myself for the worst and a potential repeat of my graduating class for another year,” he says.

The prospect of jobs in China’s booming film and TV industries has driven more students to sign up at art colleges, considered as incubators for the nation’s film stars. Prestigiou­s art schools used to have long queues when applicants waited their turn for annual on-site exams.

More than 1.15 million students have applied for art majors across the country this year, according to the ministry’s statistics.

The Communicat­ion University of China has opened online admissions for 23 majors and directions. The school’s expert teams are evaluating videos submitted by candidates online.

Candidates are asked by the university to shoot videos using just their smartphone­s, rather than profession­al equipment, to ensure fairness. It forbids makeup and any special or modifying effects. “Video works should keep the original images and audio, and no postproduc­tion is allowed,” it says in the online examinatio­n notice.

Yan Leifan, chief of the university’s admission office, says the university received more than 21,000 applicatio­ns this year, a slight increase over last year.

“It is difficult to identify cheating in online exams. This may be a common problem faced by schools this year,” he says.

The university will require some re-examinatio­ns two weeks after

to compare the results with the online entries in order to check for cheating, he says.

Chen Zhiwen, a member of the expert group of the National Education Examinatio­n Committee, says that, in addition to using technology such as face recognitio­n, education authoritie­s have cooperated with the public security department­s to carry out strict identity screening for art school applicants. Face recognitio­n is required before online video examinatio­ns can commence. all art

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