VN abolishes incentive to octogenarian heroines who take
college exam
The Vietnamese Ministry of
Education and Training (MoET) has scrapped a contentious rule that
would grant additional grades to Vietnamese Heroic Mothers – who are
generally in their 80s, 90s – when they sit for national university entrance
exams, following public derision.
MoET said
Tuesday in a circular that bonus points will not be added to the total score
of the mothers, women who fought for the cause of national liberation,
usually by supporting or hiding Vietnamese liberation army soldiers in
wartime, if they sit for university entrance exams.
This new
ruling will be in effect as of August 30 to replace the regulation issued on July
4 whereby these mothers, together with those who engaged in the country’s
1945 revolution against French colonial rule, would be given two extra points
when they take tests to gain admission to college.
Opponents
immediately pointed out that most of the mothers are too old to enroll in
college, so it is nearly impossible for them to benefit from this
preferential treatment.
A National
Assembly Deputy, Nguyen Minh Thuyet, even dismissed the policy as “mechanical
and unnecessary” because such mothers are in their 80s, 90s at the moment so
few would ever think of taking the exams.
Dr. Nguyen
Ngoc Dien, vice president of the Ho Chi Minh City University of Economics and
Law, echoed Thuyet’s opinion by saying that the regulation was “weird,”
“unrealistic,” and showed a sign of bureaucracy in introducing rules in
A university
admissions officer added that he had never seen any application from “the
children of these mothers,” so the prospect of the heroines themselves taking
admission tests to benefit from this policy was totally improbable.
The
Vietnamese Heroic Mother is a title that is awarded, sometimes posthumously,
to mothers who have made numerous contributions and sacrifices for the cause
of national liberation, national construction and defense, and the
performance of international obligations, according to the portal of the
Ministry of Justice.
The nation
annually requires those aspiring for a college education to pass tests in a
national exam, unlike many other countries that recruit students for higher
education based mainly on their high school performance.
Vietnamese
educators usually give extra points to certain candidates, like those who
come from poor or mountainous areas and applicants whose family took part in
the country’s wars against foreign invaders, in these exams to help them
compete with students from urban regions.
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Thứ Năm, 18 tháng 7, 2013
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