ADVERTISE | DONATION
Irrawaddy CONTACT US|FAQ
BURMESE VERSION | VIDEO






Burmese Education a Poison Plant
By KYAW ZWA MOE Monday, March 21, 2005


COMMENTS (0)
RECOMMEND (378)
FACEBOOK
TWITTER
 
MORE
E-MAIL
PRINT

While Burma’s military government is busy blaming “greedy businessmen” for corrupting the country’s education system and ruining the moral character of today’s generation, scholars have been saying that it’s the authorities who are responsible.

 

“Matriculation examinations are an important test for the youths who will take over state duties in the future,” said Police Chief Brig-Gen Khin Yi in a press conference held last Tuesday. The businessmen, he said, sell micro-books containing answers for all subjects so students can cheat at the matriculation examinations currently being held across the country. 

 

State-run newspapers report that authorities recently arrested several businessmen who produced these small books for students to secretly take into exam rooms. The reports add that those arrested could be sentenced with up to seven years imprisonment along with a fine, representing the first significant action to have been taken by authorities.

 

It’s difficult to find a teacher on a university campus who is not corrupt.

 

“Cheating in exam rooms has been going on for a long time in our country,” said Dr Thein Lwin, a Burmese scholar based in Chiang Mai. “In fact, the whole education system is derailed.”

 

Question books for matriculation exams have become a prized commodity and are traded among students, teachers and brokers, though the prices are so high that only students from wealthier families can afford them.  

 

According to May Nyein, a senior lecturer of Dagon University, Rangoon, who fled the country last month, if a student wants to find out his grade in a matriculation exam, he has to pay 30,000 kyat (about US $33) in bribes per subject to the teacher who marks the paper. Moreover, if the student wants to pass the exam, the student has to pay 300,000 kyat ($330) per subject or 1.5 million ($1,650) for all subjects, said May Nyein. She continued by saying that high-ranking officials such as ministers, rectors, professors and registrars of universities are involved in the scandal.     

 

Besides matriculation exams, the lecturer added that students, before they enter the exam room, collect 300 to 500 kyat from each student for teachers who monitor the exam room. May Nyein said that teachers who monitor exams would expect to earn about 20,000 kyat from each session, based on a usual attendance of 50 students. In return, the teacher ignores any cheating going on. This situation is most common when university exams are held in high schools, the lecturer added.



1  |  2 



COMMENTS (0)
 
Please read our policy before you post comments. Click here
Name:
E-mail:   (Your e-mail will not be published.)
Comment:
You have characters left.
Word Verification: captcha Type the characters you see in the picture.
 

More Articles in This Section

bullet 'My Wife Died From Police Abuse,' Says Husband

bullet US Says Observer Conditions Don't Meet Int'l Standards

bullet 159 Observers to Monitor Burma Election

bullet Govt to Address Breaches of SSA-South Ceasefire: Aung Min

bullet Burma Investors Pin Hopes on Seminal Sunday

bullet Malaysia PM Leads 50-Strong Delegation to Burma

bullet US Congress to Assess Burma's Political Prisoner Issue

bullet Rangoon Woman in Police Station Death Plunge

bullet Burmese Legal System Remains Tool of Govt: AHRC

bullet Burmese Army Chief Defends Political Role






Thailand Hotels
Bangkok Hotels
China Hotels
India Hotels

Donations

Home |News |Regional |Business |Opinion |Multimedia |Special Feature |Interview |Magazine |Burmese Elections 2010 |Archives |Research
Copyright © 2008 Irrawaddy Publishing Group. All Rights Reserved.