Hey Ayi,
I teach English at a university. Why does the word 'test'
immediately
cause my students' faces to turn white with fear?
Yours truly,
Lotta Learn
Dear Lotta,
Have pity on your students! They were traumatized as teenagers.
Every
year, between July 7 and 10, Chinese middle school students take the
infamous gaokao or high school graduation tests. Egged on by
eager parents,
students turn into zombies well in advance of these notorious
days and
remain that way for some time afterward, recovering from the months
of late night preparation. Many Chinese youngsters joke that getting
a university degree requires very little studying whereas gaining
admission
into university has ruined the health of many a studious youth.
Examination frenzy is not a new phenomenon in the Middle Kingdom. A
common Peking Opera trope involves a male student perusing
ancient texts
in a poor, dimly lit temple, preparing for the Civil Service
Examination
aka Imperial Examination. This test qualified young men to become
government
officials by testing how accurately they could memorize Confucian
classics,
which is of course highly appropriate preparation for organizing the
affairs of rural Chinese villages. Anyhow, in the old Peking
Opera tale,
a beautiful girl spies on the diligent young scholar through a small
hole in the paper window of his room. Naturally they fall in love
because
he is an idealized geek and she is a charming maiden. But the young
man must leave the girl in order to sit the Imperial Examination.
The
boy passes the examination and becomes a mandarin (scholar
official).
He returns home to marry his love and they live happily ever after.
This formula is repeated in hundreds of operas and stories. The flip
side of the coin however, is the tale of the young man who fails the
examination. The unsuccessful candidate either cannot go home, or
returns
in shame. He loses his popularity with maidens. If there is a
girl who
truly loves him, she ends her shame by jumping in a river and
drowning
herself.
These stereotypical opera stories give an idea of the pressure under
which even today's Chinese youngsters take their final high
school tests:
failing or doing badly is seen as the first part of a rapid slide
into
ruin.
Unlike today's egalitarian system, wealth and status in the rigidly
stratified society of imperial China were dependent entirely on
political
power. The only pathway to power was through the examination system,
often called "the Ladder to the Clouds" (zhishang
qingyun). The metaphorical
ladder had four rungs. The first rung was an examination held in the
examinee's district capital. After paying a stiff fee, candidates
would
take the test over a whole day and night. Each candidate would spend
the entire time alone in a small cell, writing out memorized
extracts
from the philosophical, historical and literary classics of
Confucianism.
The degree awarded to successful examinees, called 'flowers of
talent'
(xiucai), was about equivalent to the certificate given to
graduating
lower middle school students today.
Those who passed would continue studying and then travel to the
provincial
capital to take the tests of the second rung, taking with them
necessary
supplies like candles, writing instruments, food and books. The
student
would enter a large hall filled with thousands of examination cells,
each no larger than six feet deep and three feet wide. Many boys
would
transcribe Confucian classics on their underwear or on concealed
pieces
of paper, so students were thoroughly searched before they
entered their
cubicles. The exams lasted three days (like today's university
entrance
exams), conferring the title of Promoted Scholar (jinshi)
on those who
passed.
Promoted Scholars travelled to the imperial capital to sit exams
that
allowed entrance into the national civil service. Mandarins with
real
ambition climbed up the fourth rung by taking the most difficult
test:
a palace examination under the Board of Rites (dianshi)
held in the
presence of the emperor. Every year, as many as 3,500 candidates
would
sit the exam that conferred the right to hold government office.
Around
10 percent of them would pass, a figure very close to today's
university
admission rate.
In theory the system was meritocratic and even a peasant of the most
humble origins was allowed to sit the examinations. In practice,
local
gentry (officials or nobility) were most likely to send their
sons up
the Ladder to the Clouds because they could pay good teachers and
bribe
bad officials. The examination system nonetheless provided
remarkable
social stability. Ideally, aspirants for office aimed their ambition
not at amassing wealth and power but at service to their
ancestors and
to the emperor.
China brought the era of the imperial examination system to a close
in 1905. After a series of humiliating military defeats,
beginning with
the first Opium War, intellectuals began to feel that China was
socially
and technologically backward. In 1872, an official named Li
Hongchang
argued that scholars "have confined themselves to the study of
stanzas
and sentences and are ignorant of the greatest changes of the
last several
thousand years."
Education, like everything else, was chaotic and differed vastly
from
place to place after the fall of the Qing Dynasty (1911), until the
founding of the People's Republic (1949). The post-revolutionary
national
school system was modeled partly on the Soviet system, until the
Cultural
Revolution (1966-76) when it was modeled after the pedagogic
principles
outlined by the characters of The Lord of the Flies.
Since then, things have stabilized. Today's students have many
choices.
There are vocational high schools for people who don't want to go on
to university; cram colleges for students who fail their graduation
exams but still want to go to university; part-time and distance
learning
programs for those who want to work and get rich ("It's glorious!")
at the same time as studying; exchange programs at two-bit colleges
and high schools in western countries for students who wish only to
emigrate and finally: men selling 'degree certificates' for students
who prefer not to study at all!
The university entrance examination in July is still the most famous
and popular test. Students take six or seven subjects: English,
mathematics,
Chinese language and at least three of history, chemistry,
geography,
physics or biology. Successful students are 'unusually lucky
persons'
(tianzhi jiaozi). They can go onto university where they
learn to drink
beer, smoke cigarettes, flirt and start multi-million dollar
software
companies.
In conclusion Lotta, your students are scared of tests because
the very
word kaoshi (test) evokes an anxiety about making the
grade that has
been around for five thousand years. In the examination cubicle, no
one can hear you scream!