It is inconceivable that such an influential music professional school as Sichuan Conservatory of Music should have a vicious incident of buying and selling student status. After all, many outstanding musicians like Di Yun and Chris Lee graduated from this school. Three female professors in the Music Department of Sichuan Conservatory of Music accept bribes from candidates according to a charging standard every enrollment season. It is said that only students who pay money have the opportunity to enter this school. What is even more unexpected is that this rule of paying for admission seems to be no secret. Many parents and old teachers know this hidden rule, but everyone knows it tacitly.
Female professors take bribes regularly every year, and parents of students scramble to send money to teachers every year for their children to study. It seems that the professor and the examinee have formed a deformed and mutually beneficial relationship. This seemingly normal and abnormal relationship is a gray area of school education, a challenge to educational fairness and justice, and a disrespect for talents and knowledge.
Education has always been a very serious matter, and there is no place for anything that violates the education system. The scandal of buying and selling student status in Sichuan Conservatory of Music has to arouse the reflection and attention of educators. Perhaps buying and selling student status in Sichuan Conservatory of Music is not a case. Maybe it will happen in some schools, but what I want to say is that I hope it is impossible, and I hope that education will remain clear forever. University is a place where students grow up rapidly and should be a pure land. The school can't let the social copper stink disturb the clean atmosphere of the school.