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June 9, 2014

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China putting its college entrance exam to the test

AN army of almost 9.4 million examinees, slightly less than the population of Sweden, had their dreams put to the test by China’s annual college entrance exam over the weekend.

Gaokao, as the exam is known, is under examination, too. Increasingly criticized for its role in focusing the national education system on exam results rather than genuine quality, gaokao is having its biggest overhaul since it resumed in 1977, the year after the “cultural revolution” (1966-76) ended.

The keyword to reform could be decentralization. Shanghai took the lead in running its own gaokao in 1985, and now about half the country has followed suit, with the rest retaining the unified “national” exam.

In 2003 Tsinghua, Peking and 20 other universities were given limited rights to set their own admission standards, meaning 5 percent of freshmen were selected not solely according to their gaokao scores.

Applicants with outstanding performances in provincial or even international science Olympiads could earn themselves credit and increase their chances of being enrolled by a prestigious university, even though their Chinese literacy or English might not be up to scratch. Extra credit can also come from artistic or sporting talent.

Diversifying standards and opening the college door to a wider set of applicants with special talents was a good idea, but was scandalously abused by some universities.

Cai Rongsheng, former head of admissions at Beijing’s Renmin University of China, was arrested on May 30 on bribery charges. Cai was put under official investigation in November 2013 and Renmin suspended its private admissions for 2014 soon after. Cai is accused of taking over 10 million yuan (US$1.62 million) to “help” students during recruitment.

 Gaokao is swamped by waves of doubt on admission transparency and fairness. Supplementary scores, in particular, have increasingly been put under the microscope.

Due to lack of supervision, what were once rights of universities to admit whoever they chose, turned out to be tradable privileges for those who could afford them and led to corrupt admission procedures, said Wang Feng, charged by the Ministry of Education with the task of reforming the system.

Deng Xiuxin, president of Huazhong Agricultural University, criticized some practices in art exams. Random sketches are easily declared masterpieces by examiners bought off in advance.

Extra credits cut

“People who are not art experts have no idea about the fraud,” Deng, a deputy to the National People’s Congress, said during this year’s NPC session.

Xiong Qingnian, of Fudan University, wants third parties to watch over and evaluate the admission process. It will take time for his suggestion to come to fruition, but meanwhile, 31 education authorities have cut the items that earn applicants extra admission credit.

In southwest China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, first prize winners in national science Olympiads will no longer be given extra points.

Guangxi started to readjust its policy in 2011. Winners of provincial science and technology contests and students who won merit for good virtue are no longer given extra marks.

Guangdong Province has trimmed its items to six from 23 this year, meaning the number of applicants who can get extra scores will drop by more than 90 percent.

However, there are calls for preferential treatment for gaokao examinees from rural areas where education resources and quality are often inferior.

During the annual NPC national session this year, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang vowed to increase by at least 10 percent the number of rural students from poor areas enrolled in key universities.




 

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