SOUTH Korea will drop so-called “killer questions” from its notoriously tough college entrance exam in a bid to reduce reliance on private cram schools, the Education Ministry said today.
More than half a million students sit the annual nine-hour test, known as “suneung”, which plays a crucial role in deciding a student’s college, career, and even marriage prospects.
The inclusion of “killer questions”, which cannot be answered by simply studying the curriculum taught at state schools, was meant to help distinguish top students.
But it has created an arms race of extra educational spending as parents and students flock to expensive private tutoring centres known as “hagwons” to get ahead.
“I will do everything I can in my capacity as the education minister… to exclude questions outside of the public education system to make the test a fair test,” education minister Lee Ju-ho said yesterday.
Today the education ministry told AFP it would press ahead with the reform, saying it “stood by” Lee’s comment.
Previous efforts to change the system have flopped, including an attempt this year to remove “killer questions” from the mock exam.
The importance of the test is reflected in extraordinary measures that authorities take to prevent any disturbance, including suspending take-offs and landings at airports during the English listening test.
Enormous pressure placed on students in South Korea’s ultra-competitive education system has been blamed for teenage depression and suicide rates that are among the highest in the world.
Lee said officials should “reflect on themselves” for previously failing to address the test’s difficulty, which he called the “driving force” behind explosive growth in private education.
While the government stood idly by, the pockets of cram schools “got fatter”, he added.
South Korean households spent more than US$20 billion (RM92.6 billion) on private education for primary, middle, and high-school students last year, according to Statistics Korea.
The figure translates to a monthly average spend of $320 per student. – AFP, June 20, 2023.
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