It is held in the middle of June every year 165438+ 10, and the admission rate is only 50%. This is a real wooden bridge. The national college entrance examination in Korea 1 day is completed, which not only tests intelligence, but also tests endurance, and the examination paper is extremely difficult. In 20 17, 538,000 people took the national college entrance examination in Korea, and only 9 candidates got full marks, 8 of them were repeat students.
Terrible enrollment rate
China's college entrance examination rate is about 80%, while South Korea's is only about 40%. What is even more desperate is that some surveys show that the enrollment rate of candidates in wealthy areas in the south of the Yangtze River is much higher than that of ordinary candidates. The enrollment rate of candidates in Jiangnan is about 43%, while the enrollment rate of children in ordinary families is only 18%. The average score of candidates in the rich area is 43 points higher than that of ordinary candidates. Due to the tilt and uneven distribution of educational resources, the enrollment rate of high schools that only the rich with advanced education and science can afford is significantly higher than that of ordinary high schools.
A society more cruel than the college entrance examination.
I finally went to college, and everyone thought that if I went to a good university, I could sit back and relax. However, this is not the case. Class discrimination in universities is still obvious. If you come from an ordinary high school instead of an external high school or a science high school, you will gradually be marginalized. According to statistics, the unemployment rate of Korean graduates is as high as 1 1%. Even if you graduate from a prestigious school, you can't guarantee your job, let alone being an ordinary person.
Korean college entrance examination, in a sense, is not only a competition of learning ability, but also a competition of information. However, intelligence information is often monopolized by the upper and middle classes and only exchanged in the class, forming an educational monopoly. From then on, it fell into a vicious circle. In fact, the reason is the concept of "class" in South Korea. It's not that children from poor families don't work hard, but that resources are unevenly distributed.