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PDF Editor FAQ

How did you beat the school system?

(I deleted my previous answer and decided to rewrite a new one.)In my high school, whenever we had our Ministry exams, our marks were given online on the school board’s website in early July.In order to access your ministry governmental exam mark on the school board’s website, you must type in your student number (password) and your last name (user name.)However, months before the marks were given—in Secondary 4 and 5 (grade 10 and grade 11) I had access to the student ID numbers because the day before our exams, I took pictures of my friend’s seating number so they know where to sit in the exam room, where there was also the student’s ID numbers attached beside it.On the left column is student ID number, and the crossed out words in black are student’s last name,Now, how did I beat the school system?Well with the student ID numbers I took with my phone, I had access to almost half of the student’s ID numbers in my grade, as well as their last name—where I can look up their ministry exam marks and see what they got on the exam.For example, I access my friend’s ministry mark, without them knowing.I did this for two years until I graduated high school.Nobody in my grade nor the school knows how I access the student’s ministry marks.FYI: for me to access all of the student’s ID number without leaving a trace, I went on incognito mode. Hehehe.That’s how I beat the school system.Cheers,—Britney Vu.

What was a loophole that you found and exploited the hell out of?

I didn't exploit. But my friend did. He studied with absolutely no money for 2 years in a university.Jamia Millia Islamia, a central university in Delhi was that university.Let me take you through the admission process.You give an entrance. You clear it. You find your name in the merit list. During counselling you submit your original mark sheets for a lock-in period of few months. You pay your first year fees. Submit one copy of fee slip to the office. One copy is attached to the original certificates. One copy is with you. After this, you name in entered in the ledger and you finally are the student of the university.You only need that first year slip to make your student ID, bus pass, for stickers of your car and entry to university when you don't have your student ID.My friend did quite a simple thing. He exploited the lack of communication of the bank with the university. In first year slip, the accountant gives the ledger number. That ledger number is not verified with any computerised record.He simply gave a computer expert some money to make a replica of the fee slip with fudged numbers. He asked his colleagues the fees for various activities.At the time of scholarships too, they make you attach the latest fee slip and semester mark sheets. But there is no way the fee slip can be verified. They concentrate only on mark sheets and student ID to verify.Moreover the bank slip generated by the Jamia has no 3D hologram or a special paper to be printed on. It is printed on a plain A4 size paper to give us three copies.This is very peculiar. In my present university, I need to pay fees for every year and show it at the time of filling semester form. That slip has computer records. It has a 3D hologram and a special paper.The Bank of India is that bank which tied up with Jamia university.The one with DU( Hindu college) is SBI. They have all the security measures mentioned.Only a better quality of paper, interlinking of records, better verification measures preferably a bar code is the only way to fix this.Interestingly, Jamia Millia Islamia has bar code in both student ID and library card. But they give information about books issued and student's personal Information. No information about fees.DELHI UNIVERSITY POST GRADUATION CLASSES: anyone can attend classes.Let me explain the system.You give the entrance. You clear it. You find your name in the merit. You take admission in the college based on your merit. I took admission in Hindu as I was AIR 4.Now, there are 500 students in MA political science at North and south campus cumulatively. Anyone enrolled in MA political science can attend classes at south or north campus. Classes are held at one point that is faculty of social sciences.In north campus alone there are 250 students. Before sitting in classes or entering the faculty no one asks you the student ID. You can attend classes. But, obviously you cannot give your exam.This was exploited by School of open learning(SOL) students who acted like a normal students. They took all the classes by top professors but only sat in SOL exams.God bless Delhi.A

How does South Korea's education system affect students?

There’s plenty of ways which South Korea’s education system affects students, and larger Korean society in general. And as a South Korean, I’m rather unhappy to say I find most of it negative.There’s a term in Korea, 학벌주의 (Hak-bul-joo-wi), which would roughly translate to academic elitism. And academic elitism in South Korea has always been particularly strong. In my opinion, other than things concerning the school curriculum, some of the largest problems concerning the education system comes from the academic elitism bred by said system than the system itself.Extreme CompetitionHello, meet Se-yoon Ahn. This 8 year old girl has been tested and certified to be a genius at an IQ of 142. She also suffers through 11 Hakwons, or after school academies/tutoring, per week due to that fact.“My daily life?”“Do you mean going to school and doing my homework?”“I think that’s it.”Depressing, no? This is a 8 year old. Oh wait, never mind, it’s the Korean age I’m talking about here. This girl is technically 6 year old. A 6 year old saying she knows nothing but school and homework.Yes, Se-yoon’s case is extreme - that’s why she came out on TV in the first place. The thing is though, it’s not as extreme as it’d seem. Korean students, to win in the race that is the education system, mostly go through countless hours of studying, through Hakwons in order to enter the college they want to.I’ve lived under very liberal parents - I’ve gone through at least 8 Hakwons throughout my life, including the Math academy I went to from 7th grade, the Toefl Academy I joined to in 9th grade, the SAT Hakwons I sacrificed my summer vacations for, and the College Interview Academy I briefly encountered during college admissions. Most students undergo a lot more Hakwons than I do, and generally more than two in a given time period.Why?So they can go to the college they want to enter of course! But…Studying….for what?Remember the Hakwons I went to? Most of them, I went of my own volition. Some students aren’t that lucky.I’ll tell you a story a friend of mine told me. She worked in an Hakwon for an year or so, and one of her pet peeves were parents. The thing is, Korean parents can be obsessive when it comes to education, even more than the students themselves. So what my friend underwent was having parents call her every 30 minutes to check if their children were studying properly. Every. 30. Minutes.It gets worse though. Some parents actually made surprise visits to the Hakwon to check up on their children. If they found their exhausted child sleeping during a class or during a self-study period……well, let’s just say that they really weren’t happy about it.The thing is though, these students who have been forced all their lives to study by their parents, tend to study just for the fact that they’re expected to study. In fact, a lot of them go through depression when they reach college - they expect their lives to become a smooth ride after the struggle of college admissions, only to find out everything is still the same in college, except with even higher expectations.College ElitismNow, a few of you might have this question: How did the fierce competition occur in the first place? Why are students studying just for the sake of studying?*A list of South Korean colleges, divided by Humanities/Human sciences (left) and the Natural Sciences/Engineering (right)Look up 한국 대학교 순위권 (Korean Colleges tiers) and you’ll find plenty of pictures similar to this. But before that, note the hierarchy that exists in this categorising of colleges. Generally, Korean society obsesses over categorising colleges by their name value. SeoYonKo (서연고), otherwise known as SKY, makes up the top three colleges (SNU, Yonsei Uni., Korea Uni.) in Seoul. The next tier is So-Sung-Han, made up of the So-gang, Sung-Kyun-Kwan, and Han-yang Universities. Then the Joong-Kyung-Wei-Shi Universities and so on.Either way, these are some of the more prestigious colleges Korea manages to offer. The thing is though, Korean society doesn’t just categorise the colleges themselves, but also the students who enroll in these colleges. The Korean college defines a student, and some believe that their entire lives are defined by the college/university they graduate from. As a result, more and more people don’t focus on what they want to study, but rather where they want to study in as I stated in the point above.Defining people by CollegesOne side effect of this however, and here’s where we can find the basis of the problem, is that people automatically start to see those who graduate from higher colleges as superior. Nothing else matters - whether you’re kind, outgoing, pro-active, knowledgeable or wise. Students who go to unknown colleges are often called ‘지잡대생’ aka ‘rubbish-college students’ and are labelled lazy, uneducated, and unmotivated regardless of what kind of people they actually are. Everything comes down to the question of what college do you go to?I had a shock a few weeks back where someone I knew from SNU Med school said this: “How dare those rubbish-college graduates complain to me? I’m a SNU Med student.” In that situation, he was certainly in the wrong and everyone could see that. But the fact that he got into the most academically competitive field made him feel inclined to think he had the right to ignore other people around him.Then there was the group of stories that came out on the news, of SNU students handing out their SNU student IDs when asking for something as if their student IDs made them qualified to get whatever they wanted. One student, taking out his ID, requested a man studying in a cafe to go to the noisy floor upstairs so that said student could sit in the quieter floor downstairs with his girlfriend. Another asked a girl for her number while taking out his SNU ID, and another SNU told off another student in a study cafe to stop fidgeting while, yes, taking out his SNU card.Okay, now it seems like I’m bashing SNU students. The only reason why these stories of SNU students come out so often is probably because they’re given the most attention as the top students in South Korea. There are probably plenty of stories of Yonsei and Korea University students as well doing something similar - God knows I’ve seen and heard of similar things happening plenty of times within Yonsei.Either way, it doesn’t change the fact that many students who go to top universities and colleges believe that they have the right to demand things from society. And perhaps it’s no surprise - many of the top tier students face the awe or envy of their peers on a lower tier. I’ve heard a So-gang student see a Yonsei student and say “man, it’s a Yonsei student…I’m jealous as hell.” I’ve often heard the terms 갓연세, 갓고대, 갓서울 - god-Yonsei, god-Korea, god-SNU. The terms themselves are an exaggeration (a wording trend nowadays has people putting ‘god’ in front of something they find amazing or respect), but it shows how much society elevates certain colleges and the students that go to them.It’s an unfortunate cycle. The students who reach the top believe it’s in they deserve more from society; after all, haven’t they struggled the most in academics? Haven’t they been brought up learning from society that a prestigious college degree is all that is needed to be respected? On the other hand, the students who have undergone the system go on to reinforce this belief within Korean society.I wonder when we will escape?

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