South Korea’s national college entrance exam starts on Thursday, but without ‘killer questions’

Parents of college aspirants taking part in a Buddhist prayer to wish for their high scores on the upcoming state scholastic aptitude test. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

SEOUL - The Suneung, South Korea’s national college entrance exam, is less than a week away, with 2023’s test seeing a number of changes.

The Education Ministry in June announced that it would exclude “killer questions” – excessively difficult questions, the material for which is often not covered in the public education system.

The change came following President Yoon Suk-yeol’s comments that such questions might create an excessive dependence on private education.

The ministry formed a Suneung committee earlier in 2023, which operates in addition to the pre-existing committees that design and review exam questions.

The new committee consists of 25 incumbent high school teachers who have more than 10 years of teaching experience, but no experience in Suneung question design, to review the questions with a fresh set of eyes.

Concerns remain that the absence of killer questions may make the exam too easy. The number of students with perfect scores in the mock mathematics test in September, which was designed without killer questions, was 2,520 across the country, 2.7 times higher than the 937 who achieved a perfect score in 2022’s Suneung math test.

Meanwhile, the total number of applicants for the test decreased in 2023, while the percentage of retakers has reached its highest level in 28 years.

The Education Ministry on Nov 7 announced that 504,588 applicants have registered for 2023’s Suneung, a decrease of 3,442 from in 2022.

Among them, 326,646 are high school graduates, accounting for 64.7 per cent, while 159,742 students, representing 31.7 per cent, are retakers, often referred to as “N-soosaeng” who are taking the test for the Nth time.

Although the total number of test takers has significantly decreased, the number of retakers has risen by 12.2 per cent compared to 2022.

The proportion of retakers and applicants other than high school graduates now stands at 35.3 per cent of the total, marking the highest ratio in 28 years since 1996.

The prediction that 2023’s Suneung will be easier than usual appears to have contributed to the increase in the number of retakers.

Ongoing discussions on expanding the medical school quota may have been another factor contributing to the influx of students who have already gone to college but wish to retake Suneung.

In a government survey, 40 medical schools nationwide said that they can afford to increase their medical student numbers to over 2,000.

The Suneung will take place for the first time since the official conclusion of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Following the easing of quarantine measures, confirmed patients and students with symptoms of Covid-19 will take the exam at the same test site with other test-takers, without separation.

Separate test sites or test rooms and temporary test sites in hospitals, which were installed in 2022 for those subject to Covid-19 isolation, will no longer take used.

While it is not mandatory, the Education Ministry recommends those with confirmed or unconfirmed cases of Covid-19 to wear a mask at all times during the test. Such students will be provided with a separate lunch space. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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