Sunday, November 9, 2014

Zhongkao

Students taking the Zhongkao test.

 

For my Chinese research topic I choose to research the Zhongkao testing. My pen pal, Bree (whom is my secondary source), wrote about this senior high school entrance examination. I found it very interesting and wanted to learn more about it! In the paper she wrote me, Bree described that she was a junior high school students preparing to take this big examination. It kind of confused me because the way she described it made me think of taking the ACT, but in her case this was a much bigger test than the ACT, although it was for getting into high school!

 

I found some helpful information from http://www.chinaeducation.info/Standardised-Tests/K12-Tests/Zhong-kao-examination.html as my primary source. The website explained that the test was for students to get into institutions at the high school level if they scored high enough. There are many different types of schools you can get sent to: secondary skills, vocational, technical and common high schools. Chinese students take the test at the end of their ninth grade year (ninth grade is considered a junior high school grade). If students fail the Zhongkao they are often sent back to junior high school. This is also called “sending back the document”. If the student lives in a different region of China then they may be tested over different subjects. The main subjects that this written test focuses on is Chinese, Mathematics and English (http://www.chinaeducation.info/Standardised-Tests/K12-Tests/Zhong-kao-examination.html).  

After finding this information I learned that Bree got accepted into a vocational high school. I honestly don't think I would like being tested like this, especially at such a young age. It sounds like they are splitting up the super smart kids and the kids that aren't as smart into separate high schools. I already despise the ACT, and this type of testing sounds worse. I makes me wonder if it's anything like MAP testing. I just don't see this type of testing being fair to all students, because you have students who are bad test takers although they are extremely smart. Therefore this type of testing doesn't benefit all students.

 

Work Cited

Letter from Bree


 

 

 

6 comments:

  1. I agree that this test doesn't benefit all students.

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  2. I have always looked at situations like this with the perspective of subjectivity. When taking a standardized test I feel like its forcing people to a box that was not meant for them. So with that logic, I'm happy that we agree on the same ideas that test don't benefits all, and that it could harm them in the end as it is holding them back from their dreams.

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  3. I hate standardized test. They stress me out. I wouldn't want to take one to get in to high school and college.

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  4. Standardized testing has never appealed to anyone who has had to take them; to have your future decided by a test taken at such a young age seems both unfair and limiting. Personally, I hate these sorts of tests, and this sounds like just another example of good intentions gone wrong.

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  5. Testing to be able to get into school is never fun for anyone. If anyone it causes a lot more stress and problems for students.

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  6. Two different cultures and nations., but the U.S. and China believe that standardized tests are important. I fail to understand why they are an adequate way to measure a students intelligence.

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