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  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    7:38am, EST

    Students hypnotized in preparation for South Korea's exam hell

    Kim Hong-Ji / Reuters

    A therapist hypnotizes students retaking the college entrance exams, during a meditation session at Deung Yong Moon Boarding School in Kwangju, South Korea on October 30, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Conversations between men and women are forbidden at the school on the outskirts of Seoul, where security cameras watch the students' every move. There is no access to television, the Internet, mobile phones or MP3 players.

    Welcome to the monastic life of a boarding school for students dedicated to spending nine months preparing to retake South Korea's college entrance exams, in the hopes of a place at the best college and a job for life at a top corporation.

    Kim Hong-Ji / Reuters

    A student retaking the college entrance exams attends class at Deung Yong Moon Boarding School on October 30, 2012.

    South Korea's exam hell is an annual event so full of pressure that many students are driven to despair, with some even taking their own lives. More than 50 percent of those between the ages of 15 and 19 who are suicidal have given "academic performance and college entrance" as a reason, says the national Statistics Korea. Read the full story.

    Previously on PhotoBlog: Chinese students face "the most pressure packed test in the world"

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    5 comments

    The importance placed on education for education's sake is overblown around the world. It would be better to teach (if it can be taught) common sense and decency, rather than 'book learning' in any case. Intelligent people can pick up on subjects, but not everyone is cut out to be a top executive -- …

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    Explore related topics: asia, education, school, south-korea, exam, world-news
  • 7
    Jun
    2011
    6:58am, EDT

    Nine million Chinese high school students face their toughest test

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    Students walk out of a school after the first test of the National College Entrance Exams in Beijing on June 7.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    More than nine million Chinese students embarked Tuesday on the gaokao, a make-or-break college entrance exam described by Xinhua as "the most pressure packed test in the world." Ramping up that pressure a little itself, the local news agency continued:

    Expectations are high. Only a fraction will make it to the top universities in the country. The result of the two-day test could define their fate in a fast changing world. They will face their fears and some will conquer them. With the support of a nation, the future rests on the shoulders of a generation coming of age.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    Mothers wait near a school as their children take the National College Entrance Exams in Beijing on June 7.

    According to a report in The Christian Science Monitor, teachers at some schools have adopted what is described as a more Western approach, aimed at encouraging their students to chill out, instead of piling on the stress:

    A school in Beijing is telling its Year 13 students to go out and lie on the grass for a while. Others are organizing pillow fights or games of blind-man’s buff or limbo dancing competitions.

    Shi Tou / Reuters

    A member of staff from the city's command centre of education exams watches real time monitors showing students taking the National College Entrance Exams in Chongqing municipality on June 7.

    Meanwhile, the high stakes involved have apparently led some to seek out elaborate ways of cheating. The AP reports from Beijing:

    China's Education Ministry says police have detained 62 people for selling wireless headphones, two-way radios and other electronic devices to cheat on this week's nationwide college entrance exam.

    The ministry said in an announcement Sunday the detentions are intended to protect the exam's integrity. More than 9 million high school students are to take the test Tuesday and Wednesday.

    In a society where many people see connections as crucial to getting ahead, the entrance exam is defended as meritocratic, giving everybody a chance of attending university.

    Sean Yong / Reuters

    A police officer uses a wireless signal detector to detect possible transmissions of exam information via radio devices or "radio cheating", outside a school during the National College Entrance Exams, in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, on June 7

     

    47 comments

    Interesting how many cheating deterrents they have when the culture encourages ripping off patents, making "knock off" items illegaly branded, bootlegging cd's and movies and cheating in general, you would think they would encourage cheating to get these kids ready for real life.

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, education, exam, world-news, high-school, featured, gaokao, college-entrance

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