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Education in China: crack down on cheating during college entrance exam

As millions of Chinese students gear up for the national college entrance examination, education and police authorities issued stern warnings against cheating. The Chinese Ministry of Public Security has instructed police departments across China to make detailed plans to ensure the security of the exam, which falls on June 7 to 9 each year […]

As millions of Chinese students geared up for the national college entrance examination, education and police authorities issued stern warnings against cheating. The Chinese Ministry of Public Security has instructed police departments across China to make detailed plans to ensure the security of the exam, which are held on June 7 to 9 each year.

Source: Reuters
Source: Reuters

In China, video cameras were installed in almost 60,000 examination halls to prevent cheating in the national college entrance exams.

In the past, some have been caught using hi-tech equipment, including tiny radio receivers, to get help with exam questions.

For three days next week, more than 10 million Chinese will sit exams to determine their college entrance.

The police would be on high alert for any cheating, such as the use of electronic devices by both students and people outside the exam site to exchange questions and answers, said a statement from the ministry.

The Chinese Ministry of Education announced four investigations that involved the production and sale of devices to be used during the exams, using them as a warning.

The police in northeastern Jilin Province uncovered four underground workshops late last month, where more than 100 sets of devices were found. At least seven people involved were detained.

On May 31, police in central Hunan Province detained a person surnamed Sun, who allegedly published online information about “selling” exam papers and answers to be used for the province’s examination.

But further investigation found Sun was a fraud because he did not possess any official information of the exam, an education ministry spokesman said.

In a similar case in eastern province of Fujian, a man surnamed Chen was detained by police.

The ministry said cheating students would be barred from sitting the national examination for two years. It also published telephone numbers for the public to report complaints.

Police departments were asked to assist schools to ensure exam security, for example, to prevent the theft of exam papers while they are printed and delivered.

About 10.2 million people registered to sit this year’s exam, down 3.8 percent year on year, possibly because college graduates are having a hard time finding jobs as posts are axed in the economic slowdown.

However, seats at colleges and universities are still hotly contested because a college or university diploma often means better job opportunities and income in the long term. This has been blamed for motivating some people to cheat.

By Itamar Medeiros

Originally from Brazil, Itamar Medeiros currently lives in Germany, where he works as VP of Design Strategy at SAP and lecturer of Project Management for UX at the M.Sc. Usability Engineering at the Rhein-Waal University of Applied Sciences .

Working in the Information Technology industry since 1998, Itamar has helped truly global companies in multiple continents create great user experience through advocating Design and Innovation principles. During his 7 years in China, he promoted the User Experience Design discipline as User Experience Manager at Autodesk and Local Coordinator of the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) in Shanghai.

Itamar holds a MA in Design Practice from Northumbria University (Newcastle, UK), for which he received a Distinction Award for his thesis Creating Innovative Design Software Solutions within Collaborative/Distributed Design Environments.

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