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Seven of Eleven O level students at Crescent Girls' school .....

You want to know why? very simple. they make Chinese so simple the Chinese are laughing their way to full marks!
 
One Word : FAKE

BEIJING, CHINA -- Education authorities in east China say they smashed a ring that used high-tech radio transmitters and receivers to help students cheat in the national college entrance exams.

The ring involved at least 33 people, including nine high school graduates who sat the exams last month, providing answers to questions through the Internet and radios, said officials in Zhejiang Province.

The cheating was discovered when a surveillance patrol vehicle picked up radio transmissions near the Yongkang No.1 Middle School, where exams were being held, the Zhejiang-based City Express News reports on Sunday.

Law enforcement officers apprehended 15 people in a coffee bar across a river from the school. The others were caught in another two operations.


They allegedly admitted they had transmitted test answers to students who were sitting the exam. The suspects outside the exam site were parents or relatives of the nine students.

The students are alleged to have worn tiny earphones.

Three college students from Yongkang City are also being investigated for allegedly providing test answers via the Internet from southwest China's Guizhou Province.

One of the students surnamed Xu allegedly said he heard the answers could be provided for 12,000 yuan to 16,000 yuan ($1,740 to $2,320). Xu is also alleged to have paid 1,600 yuan for the specially-designed communication system, including a transmitter, receiver, earphone and walkie-talkies.

Xu allegedly said he used the device in the first test on Chinese, but did not use it again in the afternoon maths test because he had heard some had been caught cheating.

Under college entrance exam rules, cheating examinees will be denied college entrance for two years. Regulations in Zhejiang require instances of cheating to be permanently recorded in student files, which could affect their future credit records.

A record 10.5 million Chinese sat the national college entrance exams this year. Roughly half will get a place in college.
 
BEIJING (AFP) - Chinese police have arrested six people suspected of selling high-tech devices which help students cheat in make-or-break university entrance exams, state media said Sunday.A wide range of skills courses to embrace lifelong learning.

Police in northwest China's Gansu province confiscated 30 sets of equipment, including receivers and earpieces, allegedly being sold to students sitting the exams, Xinhua news agency said.

Nearly 10 million students will sit the highly competitive tests, which are considered crucial by Chinese families, as they can determine whether a student enters the country's educated elite or joins the general workforce.


This year's three-day nationwide exams begin Monday.

According to Xinhua, the gang of six had allegedly collected over 28,000 yuan (S$5,751.20) in down payments from 11 students preparing for the exams, the report said.

The cheating devices cost up to 30,000 yuan each, it added.

The use of wireless transmitters and earpieces to cheat in exams has been on the rise throughout China in recent years.

Last year more than 1,000 applicants were caught using such devices on China's civil servant exams, while scores of people were arrested selling the equipment ahead of the 2009 college entrance exams, previous reports said.
 
Keloooonnngg AAaaaahhhhhh!


Examinations marked locally.

Tell me how many of you who can string coherent and grammatically correct sentences in an online debate can score an A1? And lets not talk about the fact that they are 17 years old doing 16 years old standard 'o' levels.

From F9 to A1?????:oIo::oIo::oIo::oIo::oIo:
 
With every foreign students doing well, this will be the same exact number of local students who would not be able to get a place in our universities !!:mad::oIo:
 
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