BEIJING, April 19 (Xinhua) -- A senior education
official on Thursday ruled out the possibility that national college entrance
examination paper designers could leak this year's exam papers on the internet
ahead of the exams in early June.
As the annual national college entrance exam nears,
some "real" exam papers said to be the work of the country's official exam
designers have emerged on the internet, attracting wide attention.
Dai Jiagan, director of the National Education
Examination Authority (NEEA) under the Ministry of Education, said college
entrance exam papers are confidential. Anyone who steals, discloses or buys exam
papers will be sentenced to up to seven years behind bars, according to the
Chinese Criminal Law.
He said this year's exam papers are currently being
written. The people who design the college entrance exam papers are professors
and teachers selected from certain universities and middle schools. They are
"confined" in certain places during the exam conception phase and hand over
their mobile phones and computers during the process.
After the exam papers have been written, the exam
designers are "confined" for a further 30 to 40 days for the sake of
confidentiality.
"It's impossible that this year's exam papers could
have emerged on the internet in advance. Those so-called exam papers on the net
will only mislead students," he said.
To ensure exam confidentiality, the department
monitors not only the design phase but also the printing, transport and
distribution of the exam papers, Dai said.
The National College Entrance Exam is one of the most
important examinations in China because it is the only chance for high school
students to get access to higher education.
Last year, 9.5 million students sat for the exam and
only 2.6 million secured enrollment to universities or colleges.
Because of the fierce competition, some examinees
resort to cheating. Last year, 3,000 were found cheating in the National College
Entrance Exam -- using mobile phones or other high-tech gadgets.
Taking advantage of examinees' desperate need for
high marks in the exam, some unscrupulous people have sold so-called "real" exam
papers on the internet in recent years. Each year the Ministry of Education
warns students not to be fooled.