China

Pair detained for helping students cheat on exams

By Chen Jia (China Daily)
Updated: 2011-01-19 07:57
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 Pair detained for helping students cheat on exams
A cheating device that resembles an eraser was confiscated on Sunday by the police during the national entrance exam for postgraduate studies in Chaohu, Anhui province. Provided to China Daily

BEIJING - Two suspects have been detained in Northeast China's Jilin province for their involvement in the sale of high-tech devices for cheating on the 2011 national entrance exam for postgraduate studies, as authorities pledged to thoroughly investigate the case.

The move follows a report on Sunday by China Central Television (CCTV), which revealed that nearly 80 percent of the answers accessed through the devices at an exam on Jan 15 in Siping, Jilin province, matched those supplied afterwards by the official training body.

The Ministry of Education (MOE) dispatched a working group to the city, which has confiscated the exam papers and is checking surveillance footage from the exam venue.

"Two suspects have been arrested and are charged with providing cheating devices to examinees in Changchun on Jan 17," Tang Yamin, deputy head of the publicity department in Siping, was quoted by People's Daily as having said.

"Nineteen cases of deception were detected among nearly 2,000 examinees, including seven instances of high-tech cheating, 11 of plagiarism and one ghost test-taker," he said.

It has been reported that provincial education authorities have begun to follow suit by checking the surveillance footage of all examination venues for suspicious behavior, including examinees who began to write their exam papers one hour after the test formally began and those who frequently looked at their wrist watches or touched their ears during the test.

The police and education authorities will collaborate on this matter, Tang said. Checks will be made on every examination paper and each examinee's identity.

Test proctors, or invigilators, will also be investigated to see if a chain of interest is at work.

With the country's increasing number of university graduates and the difficulties of securing employment, about 1.5 million students took the nationwide exam for postgraduate studies on Jan 15 and 16, a record high since 2001.

The ministry vowed to take harsher measures against cheating on the exam this year, arranging for 107,000 monitors to be present at the 46,000 examination venues around the country.

Electronic watches that had been specially adapted and wireless earphones were sold in Siping in the run-up to the postgraduate entrance exam, with answers provided within a one-kilometer radius of the examination venue, according to the CCTV report.

Devices used to cheat on exams are usually purchased over the Internet and the working group in Siping ruled out the possibility of someone in the city leaking information before the test was held, People's Daily reported.

Siping education officials suspended the grading of exam papers until the investigative team completes its work.

Despite heightened vigilance, 359 applicants committed violations during China's 2011 national civil service exam held in early December, the State Administration of Civil Service revealed over the weekend. Those caught cheating on the exam will be blacklisted and banned for life from applying for civil service jobs.

China Daily