Bra Ban On Students Ahead Of Chinese University Entrance Exam

Chinese exam

More than nine million students packed exam halls across China for the opening day of the country’s university entrance exam on Friday – with attempts to stop cheating even leading to bans on metal bra clasps.

Students in the northeastern province of Jilin were banned from wearing clothing with metal parts and education authorities installed metal detectors in exam centres to clamp down on “wireless cheating devices”, the state-run Global Times reported.

Authorities have become increasingly concerned about the risk of examinees using devices such as smartphones – some of which have become smaller and easier to hide – as an illicit aid during tests.

Around 9.12 million high-school students were registered across China to sit the crucially important two-day exam, known as the gaokao, an education ministry spokeswoman said.

Officials aimed to crack down on “sales of high-tech gear for cheating, and gaokao-related fraud”, the Global Times said.

But users of China’s Twitter-like weibos were scornful. “Everyone is paying attention to the bras. What about glasses?” said one.

There are more than seven million university places available in China for the next academic year, so that most of those who take the test will secure one, but where they will go is hugely dependent on their results.

In Beijing, Chinese, mathematics and English are compulsory subjects, with one other paper in either arts or sciences, and the exam is scored out of a maximum 750 points.

China’s top educational institutions such as Peking University or Tsinghua, also in the capital, can demand scores of around 600 or more.

The test has come under fierce criticism on China for putting enormous pressure on students, and as a symbol of educational inequality, with many low-income students whose parents have migrated to cities barred from taking the exam in their new homes.

Top institutions also generally demand higher entry qualifications for applicants from other provinces.

Weibo poster Hu Qijun said: “They claim to aim for fairness, but enrolment, education and employment have turned so unfair we have entered an age where your fate is determined by who your father is. So what’s the point of making one single exam fair?”

Questions can be bizarre. “If Thomas Edison returned to the 21st century, what would he think of cellphones?” one province asked this year, requiring an 800-character answer, according to the Sina web portal.

The central province of Hunan offered the single phrase “Walk past” as the topic for a writing composition, the report said.