Bangkok Post

Millions of students sit college entrance exams

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beIjING: Millions of Chinese students sat for notoriousl­y tough college entrance exams yesterday, the first since the country lifted zero-Covid rules that forced classes online for months on end.

China’s education ministry says nearly 13 million students, a record, are registered to take the gaokao exams — billed by state media as the “world’s toughest” — this year.

“I’ve been waking up at 4am every day, except on Sundays, to study for the past four years,” Jesse Rao, a 17-year-old high school senior in Shenzhen, said.

“I’ve done everything I can, but I still feel a bit nervous.”

In Beijing, anxious parents gathered around exam halls as their children knuckled down, many wearing red for good luck.

Zhang Jing, a mother in her forties, compared herself to Bai Suzhen, a character in Chinese folklore who is locked in a tower until her son passes an important test.

“My son is quite relaxed, I think I am more nervous than him,” Ms Zhang, wearing a red qipao, a traditiona­l Chinese dress, said.

“I have been accompanyi­ng my son and instructin­g his study from the first grade of elementary school to the first year of high school,” she explained.

Another mother, Fang Hong, told AFP she had prepared a simple breakfast of bread and eggs for her son.

“My son is a bit nervous, I told him we can accept any results of the gaokao and not put any pressure on him,” she said.

Testing high school students on their Chinese, English, mathematic­s and other science or humanities subjects of their choice, the exams are critical to landing coveted spots at China’s top universiti­es.

Many parents shell out hundreds of dollars a month on cram schools or hire graduate students to sit with their children while they study late into the evenings.

Exams are notorious for testing the ability to compose essays in response to oblique prompts, with sample questions published yesterday by the People’s Daily newspaper requiring students to contemplat­e the effect of technology on time management and the impact of a good story.

Another sample question asked them to muse on two aphorisms by President Xi Jinping, adding that the students would be marked in part on whether or not they write from the “correct angle”.

Adding to the stress, this year’s examtakers have spent the bulk of their high school years under pandemic restrictio­ns, which ended abruptly in December.

“I struggled to follow online lessons last year,” Katherina Wang, a high school student from Shanghai who has been through two snap lockdowns in the past two years, said.

“Our teachers held extra classes in the evenings and on the weekend.”

The high stakes have led to elaborate attempts at cheating.

Several provinces this year have installed scanners with facial-recognitio­n capabiliti­es to ensure that candidates do not hire proxies to take the test on their behalf, the state-run Global Times reported.

Exams can last up to four days, depending on the province, taking between an hour and 150 minutes per subject.

The maximum score is 750, with over 600 required for a place at top-tier universiti­es — for years a ticket to personal and profession­al success in China.

Very few make the cut. Last year, only 3% of exam-takers in Guangdong, China’s most populous province, scored over 600.

And for students with more modest ambitions, scores still play a critical role in securing spots in universiti­es and what subjects can be taken.

For those that do not get the results they need, there is always next year. In 2021, 17 percent of students nationwide retook their gaokao.

“If I don’t get the results I want, I will try again,” Benjamin Zhu, a high school senior from Guangzhou, said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People gesture to buses transferri­ng students to attend the National College Entrance Examinatio­n, or ‘gaokao’, in Yantai, in China’s Shandong province yesterday.
REUTERS People gesture to buses transferri­ng students to attend the National College Entrance Examinatio­n, or ‘gaokao’, in Yantai, in China’s Shandong province yesterday.

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