Think we have it bad? Look at korean testing standards!

On a College Entrance Exam Deathwatch

This entry from Jeff Harrison at Ruminations in Korea is reprinted without permission. It was first posted on Oct. 22.

I mentioned in a previous blog post that "we are now officially in suicide season, where little boys and girls turn into Peter Pan and begin their annual lemming-like plunges off of assorted tall structures."It’'s that time of year, again. My absolute least favorite time of the Korean calendar: College Entrance Exam Time (The test is now called the “CSAT”), which starts at the end of November.

I wrote about this in one of my very first blog posts a year ago. Within 36 hours of talking about the unbelievable pressure that is put on these kids and the potentially deadly consequences for anything less than near perfection, a girl had lept to her death after walking out of the exam. 24 hours later, there was another suicide related to the test. It was also revealed that three people had killed themselves a month prior to the exam due to the pressures of the exam.

Instead of finding ways to alleviate or reduce the incredible competition associated with this test, the government has decided to reduce the number of university students by more than 15,000 specifically to increase the pressure and competitiveness to enter university. Current estimates are that approximately 200 children commit suicide each year because of this exam. I am afraid that it will only get worse.

As I do not expect this year to be any different that past years, it is only a matter of time before the bodies of needlessly wasted youth begin to pile up, if they haven’'t already.

Here is a large chunk of what I wrote last year on this subject: Parents routinely spend US$1,000 to US$2,000 per month for as many as 14 years in order to prepare their students for this one day. The results of the test will determine the student’‘s future. The course of the student’'s life, what college or university the student will attend, what type of job the students will have eventually.

High school seniors will usually attend school until 4 p.m. after which they will attend the various institutes, cram school, and study halls until midnight or later. In the run up to the exam, many schools stay open and hold classes until 10 p.m. or later. Students will then go to the study halls and take private tutelage until 2 a.m. or so. Then it is up and out the door by 6 or 7 a.m. in order get to the early classes.

The test is so serious that literally the entire country makes accommodations. Official announcements are made to clear the roads for the two hours prior to the start of the test in order to allow the students to get to the test centers. It is not an uncommon site to see policemen carrying students to the test in the minutes before testing begins and crying students running down the street, begging for rides from passersby.

During the listening portion of the test, airline flights are suspended or re-routed. Trains and boats are prohibited from using their whistles. Drivers are asked to refrain from honking horns.

Over the years I have witnessed incredible abuses, including severe beatings, against students who failed to get the grades that their parents expected, or did not study as hard as their parents expected them to, or, God forbid, “fail” the entrance exam. Beatings with switches, fists, books, and other household items have been administered by parents in a misguided manifestation of love and concern for their children and the children’'s future.

Fourteen years ago, the child in the house upstairs from me was being beaten so badly that I ran up and stopped it and harbored the kid in my house for several hours until the parent had calmed down. Although the manner of expressing the concern is unacceptable, it is clear that parents understand the importance of the test in ways that young students with brains of mush and no life experience cannot begin to fathom.

As mentioned above, this single test, in all seriousness, determines the future of every test taker. Personal relationships are so important. Middle management in companies tend to hire people from the same schools as the company bosses and owners. Business owners who hire directly will tend to hire people from their schools. Add to this, the fact that emphasis is placed on the top schools in Seoul, and you are left with a hopeless situation where more than half a million students are trying to get into the same four or five schools.

Of course, not everyone can go to Seoul National University. Some people do not have the test scores; others do not have the money. They are relegated to smaller community colleges or local universities. This unfortunate situation spells doom for their future. Many companies will not even glance at an application from someone who did not graduate from one of the “lesser” schools.

What are the products of this unimaginable pressure on the young, immature kids to perform on the test, the ridiculous and irrational bias toward the top few schools, and the incestuous hiring practices of the corporate elite? Each year, there are a number of suicides directly related to performing at a less than perfect level.

Just this past weekend [ed. note: last year] someone sent a letter threatening to kill children attending schools in Gangnam-gu and to detonate bombs at the National Assembly Hall and one of the most luxurious apartment complexes in the country. The reason for issuing these threats, states the as yet unknown author, is that “Two years after graduating from a provincial college and finishing military service, I still haven’'t found a job,” and "This is a country that only appreciates people who graduate from top universities."Something must be done to diminish the importance of the college entrance exam and to allow the individual schools to set their own criteria for accepting students. Companies must be made to consider applicants on the basis of considerations other than what school the applicant attended.

WOW

<p>Yikes! And I thought the SAT was bad..>!</p>

<p>Oh well.. that's the case with most Asian countries :(</p>

<p>here's another wonderful statistic from india-</p>

<p>KEM is a top government medical college in Bombay</p>

<p>no. of applicants- 300000
no. of seats- 200</p>

<p>and these 300,000 students are all EXTREMELY qualified (they have to give an exam to be eligible to sit for the Med Entrance) most are in the top 1% of their high schools...</p>

<p>We seriously need a martian colony soon.... at least a lunar one.</p>

<p>You think that's bad, these are the students who are applying to American grad schools in droves, especially in math, science, engineering, and economics. The top students at schools like India Institute of Technology, Tsinghua University, Beijing University, and Seoul National University are in my classes at Stanford and slaughtering the curve against American-educated students.</p>

<p>Oh snap! </p>

<p>This is why you don't study and become a hobo. Mediocrity reins!</p>

<p>~mercurysquad:
"We seriously need a martian colony soon.... at least a lunar one."</p>

<p>Come on. Let's build it, before it gets too late.</p>

<p>~im_blue:
"The top students at schools like India Institute of Technology, Tsinghua University, Beijing University, and Seoul National University are in my classes at Stanford and slaughtering the curve against American-educated students."</p>

<p>Unlike the students from India, I believe that the American education system makes you to think, analyse and criticise which is finally what education is all about.
-Im_Blue, what are you doing at Stanford? :
Undergraduation, Graduation, Ph.D. ?</p>

<p>=== S H A B I N =========</p>

<p>I'm a EE grad student.</p>

<p>I believe there is a similar national exams in China and Japan too. Hong Kong and Singapore follow the British system's A levels, but I think in general, students from Singapore feel alot of pressure too right from when they start Primary school, where the race is on getting in to the 'top' secondary schools.</p>

<p>thats how all asian countries are, especially in Taiwan and Japan. but they are all like that. but in Taiwan, its not just college, its high school too. u have to test into high school and if u go to a bad high school...sucks for u ur future ends there</p>

<p>And it's not just like that in Asian nations. Many European countries have it the same way - Romanian middle schoolers take an exam to determine which high school they go to, and the competition is intense.</p>

<p>hey, that's like Japan. But like my one of my old Japanese teachers said...The higher level education system sucks there. It's much better at the lower levels. </p>

<p>Many people there, once they get into the University start committing suicide because they've been taught all their life that their goal was to attend that Univeresity. And when they finally do make it and find there's no more goal, they kill themselves.</p>

<p>I'm Korean, and I've heard the horror stories of cram school and the college entrance exams. My parents went through that years ago (dad went to Seoul National) and now my cousins in Korea are going through it. The competition is intense, simply because there are so many people in those Asian countries and there are so few "good" universities. That's why so many of them move to America and go to school here.</p>

<p>The smartest and brightest students are all in China, Japan, Korea, and Asia. Theres not enough colleges for these kids. When they come to america, they are always at the top of their class at MIT, HARVARD, PRINCETON, ETC. Proof? Just look at the top graduating class of the top schools, don't kid yourself, The Asians have Dominated most of them. We Asians Are Always The Best At Whatever We Do, Always.</p>

<p>actually no we arent. id like to see an asian dominate football lol.</p>

<p>
[quote]
We Asians Are Always The Best At Whatever We Do, Always.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Thats actually not true--maybe MOST of the time but not ALWAYS. Also, does that statement apply also to Asians in the entertainment field? I mean they should be the best at it always. Let me know when there is an Asian equal to Tom Cruise's status in the United States. (No Jet Li and Jackie Chan are not)</p>

<p>its just a shame that there are so few schools in those countries and so many qualified students. People criticize these education systems and college admissions processes, but it's the only way they can do it. Reading essays, evaluating ECs, interviewing students when 300k qualified students apply for 1000 spots simply won't work. It does suck for the students though...all their energies will have to be focused on studying for that one determining test. alot of them, although attaining extraordinary scores, are often out of touch with the real world and don't necessarily succeed in life. We are REALLY lucky to go to college in the US...the disparity between our lives and the life of a high schooler in those countries is unbelievable. When my parents went back to China to visit some friends, they met this girl who was actually one year younger than me, and she looked older than my mom....</p>

<p>Bruce Lee was unrivaled in both the martial arts world and the movie world. He was a fighter, martial artist, philosopher, actor, ect. He was always the best at each on these, Always.</p>

<p>I would venture to guess that the root of the problem lies in misweilded government power in the economy and the higher education system.</p>