English exam was too hard: German students
berlin — High school students in Germany have gathered tens of thousands of signatures in an online petition to complain about an “unfair” final English exam, saying the test was much harder than in previous years.
By Sunday, the students from the southwestern state of Baden Wuerttemberg had gathered almost 36,000 signatures — even though only 33,500 people took last month’s statewide exam.
They complained that text excerpts from American author Henry Roth’s 1934 novel “Call it Sleep” were too difficult and obscure to analyse and asked for the grading to be more lenient this year.
The final high school exams in Germany — called the Abitur — are a rite of passage that all students who want to enter university have to pass.
Only those with excellent grades and test scores will get into the most coveted university programmes, with medicine among the hardest. But other subjects like engineering or language studies also offer only a limited amount of places.
Many German students, parents and teachers have been stressed out for months over the Abitur. Often schools will cancel all regular classes for younger students during the tests so the Abitur students won’t be disturbed.
The online petition has created such uproar that even state governor Winfried Kretschmann weighed in, though he showed only limited compassion. “There’s no right to a simple Abitur,” he told the frustrated teenagers. “You wish for it, but you don’t have a right to it.”
At the same time Kretschmann admitted that his own English skills were too weak to actually judge whether the disputed text had been overly difficult, the German news agency dpa reported. Students said the passage from Roth’s novel that they had to analyse — a metaphorical description of the Statue of Liberty — was difficult to understand because of its “unknown vocabulary.” They also complained the questions they had to answer were not asked precisely. —