are the entrance exams in any way field specific, i mean, do you have to pass the same kind of test irrespective of what course of studies you re aspiring?
when i started studying physics in germany in the late 80s, it was the exit opposite: no entrance exam (just show your high school grades) , no tuition (!), nobody cared what we were doing, BUT, half the students dropped out during the first two years b/c they couldn t keep up with the pace or fell at the first big hurdle ('half-diploma'). call it an inefficient education system, but i still prefer it that way.
In the end, Koreans, albeit at a high price, are doing just fine with their (inefficient) system.
That kid in the middle has a Sonic Youth shirt on! You mean to tell me people in Korea listen to something other than K-Pop???
ReplyDelete:P
interesting article, thanks for the link!
ReplyDeleteare the entrance exams in any way field specific, i mean, do you have to pass the same kind of test irrespective of what course of studies you re aspiring?
when i started studying physics in germany in the late 80s, it was the exit opposite: no entrance exam (just show your high school grades) , no tuition (!), nobody cared what we were doing, BUT, half the students dropped out during the first two years b/c they couldn t keep up with the pace or fell at the first big hurdle ('half-diploma'). call it an inefficient education system, but i still prefer it that way.
In the end, Koreans, albeit at a high price, are doing just fine with their (inefficient) system.
umakk