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  • (중국) 중국 대입시험 까오카오(高考)
    국제문제/중국 2016. 6. 8. 00:56

    출처: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-36457453


    Gaokao season: China embarks on dreaded national exams (embark: 승선하다. embark on: 시작하다, 착수하다) (dreaded: 무서운, 두려운, 명사 앞에만 씀.)

    • 1 hour ago
    •  
    • From the sectionChina
    Senior high school students studying at night to prepare for the college entrance examsImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionChina falls silent between 7 and 9 June as students face the most important exam they will sit

    More than nine million high school graduates are sitting China's national exams, the Gaokao. 중국 대입 수험생 9백만 이상.

    Their result will determine which university they can attend, and therefore much of the rest of their future, so they are under huge pressure.

    For the first time this year, any candidate caught cheating could face jail.

    What is the Gaokao?

    The notoriously hard exam tests high school leavers on their Chinese, mathematics and English and another science or humanities subject of their choice. 수험과목: 국어, 영어, 수학, 선택과목 택일 1과목 (인문계 1과목 혹은 자연계 1과목) 총 4과.

    This picture taken on June 8, 2015 shows a high school reacting as they walk out of a school after sitting the 2015 national college entrance examination1Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionA good Gaokao result can mean a future of high earnings and a high status job

    The tests have been the focal point of the education system since the 1950s, with a break during the Cultural Revolution.

    Failing the Gaokao almost guarantees a lifetime of low-ranking employment, and family disappointment.

    The Gaokao predates modern times, having its roots in imperial China.

    Gaokao nannies (nanny: 유모, 과외교사)

    Gaokao revision is all-consuming, often at the expensive of the necessities of life.

    Professional Gaokao nannies are highly educated students or recent graduates that move in with students to study with them in the run up to the exam, says a report on the Sixth Tone website.

    Students study in Changsha, Hunan, China (3 June 2016)Image copyrightREUTERS
    Image captionThe Gaokaos are the culmination of cramming and repeating past papers for many students, say critics

    For example Zhao Yang, a Shanghai university freshman, is paid a daily wage of 300 yuan ($45; £32) to chat with his client and stay up with him during all-nighters, said a report by Tencent Finance.

    However, these nannies are not a solution to every student need, Saima Domestic Services, a Gaokao nanny agency, told Sixth Tone

    File photo of a student revising before the Gaokao examsImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionGaokao nannies typically offer their services in revising and chatting with students

    "Because they are highly educated and mainly offer companionship, they are weak in terms of cooking and cleaning," said a customer service agent.

    'Top-Scorer' hotel rooms

    To save on time spent travelling to the test centre - which can then be better spent revising- some parents opt to pay for a hotel for their child.

    Many hotels offer special Gaokao packages for students, with hotels in Beijing charging up to 2,000 yuan per night. Despite high prices, many rooms have been fully booked.

    "Recently we have had so many bookings, we cannot guarantee rooms to walk-ins," said a member of staff at Beijing's Hanting Express Hotel, according to a local report.

    Sheraton hotel in Shanghai offered students a Luxury Top-Scorer Package that consisted of a late room-return policy and a free upgrade to a luxurious suite, the hotel told the Sixth Tone.

    Test taxis

    In some cities in China, taxis were China were provided with yellow signs giving them right of way when delivering examinees to exam sites.

    Police vehicles clear a path for students leaving school to attend ChinaImage copyrightREUTERS
    Image captionThe students see huge public support during the Gaokao season - here some are being cheered on their way to sit the tests in Anhui

    A taxi company in Fujian province even provided free taxi services for students taking the Gaokao exams, says the China Daily.

    The Dazhong Taxi service in Shanghai, meanwhile, saw 1,000 Gaokao taxis booked out online within just six hours.

    'The Gaokao holy land'

    Maotanchang hosts perhaps China's most famous Gaokao bootcamp.

    Almost 20,000 students, four times the town's population, flock to the town in eastern Anhui province every year to attend the prep course at Maotanchang High School.

    Students sit the 2014 college entrance exam in China, or the 'gaokao', in Rongan.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionStudents will be tested in Chinese, mathematics, English and an additional subject of their choosing

    According to a China Youth Daily article, the programme can cost up to $8,000.

    Mobile phones and laptops are forbidden in this school, and the dormitories designed without electrical outlets. The local government has also shut down all forms of entertainment in town, leaving the students no choice but to do what they came for - study.

    Managing stress

    We've all wanted to tear up our textbooks and throw them out the window at some point, but in China, it's actually customary to do so for Gaokao students.

    However this year, the move was banned by government officials in Xiamen, who said students should release stress in a more "healthy way".

    This photo taken on May 24, 2016 shows senior high students trampling balloons to release stress before the college entrance exams at a high school in Handan, north China's Hebei province.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionHigh school students across China blow off steam before the Gaokao exam in various ways, coming up with increasingly creative ideas over the years
    This photo taken on May 24, 2016 shows senior high students flying paper planes to release stress before the college entrance exams at a high school in Handan, north China's Hebei provinceImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionFlying paper planes is another method adopted by students to release stress before the exams
    This photo taken on May 24, 2016 shows senior high students posing for photos with the slogan 'release your stress, let your dream fly'Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionChinese students pose for a picture, with the words "release your stress, let your dreams fly", placed in front of them

    Smashing watermelons is another popular practice by students.

    In China's Chongqing, around 2,000 students embarked on a "Watermelon War", with each student buying 1kg worth of the fruit.

    But if watermelons aren't your thing, perhaps stepping on balloons will appeal.

    Wireless products

    The exam rooms are strictly monitored to prevent cheating. But from hidden earphones and watches, to T-shirts with receivers, students have tried almost all means and ways to get past this.

    In previous years authorities installed metal detectors at entrances to make sure students did not sneak in smartphones, though the detectors have been known to be set off by almost anything, leading to schools in Jilin banning bras with metal fastenings.

    An invigilator (L) checks a student before the 2013 college entrance exam starts in Jilin, northeast China's Jilin province on June 7, 2013.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionIn Jilin province, even bras with metal clasps have been banned, amongst watches and other metal accessories

    Last year, officials in Henan province even deployed a drone carrying a radio scanner to catch cheats. This year, however, the stakes have been raised.

    Those that try to cheat their way to the top could face up to seven years in prison, and will also be banned from taking any other national education examinations for three years.

    Teachers paste candidate numbers on desks in an exam room a day before the National College Entrance Examination June 6, 2007 in Xian of Shaanxi ProvinceImage copyrightCHINA PHOTOS
    Image captionThe exams have been criticised for leading to a culture of cramming and rote learning

    The tough punishments will "safeguard the fairness of the tests", say educational authorities, as reported by the Global Times.

    A national campaign has also been launched, cracking down on the sale of wireless devices for cheating, unauthorised Gaokao content posted online and cheating equipment, the Ministry of Education announced.

    Surrogate exam takers 대리 수험생 (surrogate: 대리의)

    Some desperate parents are prepared to pay several million yuan to hire people to take the Gaokao on behalf of their children, said a report by the Nandu Dailypublished in the Global Times.

    The surrogates used their real photos on forged identity cards with the personal information of the real exam-takers.

    This picture taken on June 8, 2015 shows high school graduates putting together giant jigsaw puzzles made from their graduation photos on the playground after sitting the 2015 national college entrance examinationImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
    Image captionAfter the stress of the exam period, students face an intense university education before the competition of the jobs market

    Surrogates can earn up to 25,000 yuan if the test score results allow the student to enter a first-tier university.

    Encouragement

    When all else fails, there's nothing like some good old-fashioned encouragement to spur students on.

    Stephen Hawking took to social media site Weibo to wish this year's candidates good luck, calling them the "next generation of big thinkers and thought leaders", and saying they would shape the future for generations to come.

    A printscreen of Prof Stephen Hawking's post on WeiboImage copyrightWEIBO
    Image captionProf Stephen Hawking gained two million followers within hours of joining Chinese microblog Sina Weibo

    The post quickly went viral on Weibo, with many users saying they were cheered on by the physicist's encouragement.

    Screenshot of EXO's video on TwitterImage copyrightTWITTER
    Image captionSouth Korean-Chinese boy band EXO is incredibly popular in China

    South Korean-Chinese boy band EXO also wished the students luck, saying in a video that they would be able to achieve success if they believed in themselves.





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