The Korea Times

31 teachers investigat­ed for selling CSAT questions

- By Jun Ji-hye jjh@koreatimes.co.kr

A total of 31 former and incumbent teachers have faced police investigat­ions on suspicion of buying and selling of questions for the state-administer­ed College Scholastic Ability Test (CSAT).

According to documents submitted by the National Police Agency to Rep. Kim Woong of the ruling People Power Party, Thursday, police have investigat­ed 163 individual­s involving 123 such cases from June 22 to Dec. 28 last year.

Among those, investigat­ions into 52 individual­s involving 25 cases were launched after the Ministry of Education filed complaints.

Former and incumbent teachers accounted for the highest portion of the suspects at 31, with police suspecting that they sold exam questions to cram schools or lecturers and then participat­ed in creating CSAT and mock CSAT tests.

All CSAT test question writers, by law, are obliged to keep all test-related informatio­n confidenti­al.

Police said that their investigat­ions have been focused on those who were paid by private education service providers on a monthly basis.

In October, police investigat­ed major private education businesses over cases of possible collusion in this regard and conducted a search and seizure into one of them — Sidae Injae.

These investigat­ions were initiated after Yoon severely criticized the education industry on June 15 last year, referring to cases in which major cram schools and popular lecturers pay huge amounts of money to public school teachers in return for receiving exam questions, and earning a great deal of money after selling those questions to students.

The president said this practice has increased students’ reliance on private cram schools and placed a financial burden on parents, while ruining public education.

The annual CSAT is the national college entrance exam, which is regarded as one of the most important academic events in Korea, as it largely decides the outcome of 12 years of intense study for many students who desire to enter top universiti­es.

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