A recent study showed that about 55 per cent of students used their mobile phones to cheat in high-school exams. Photograph: Will Baxter/Phnom Penh Post |
Chhay Channyda
The Phnom Penh Post
National High School Exam candidates
each spent
an average of 120,000 riel – about US$30 – on bribes over this year’s
two-day testing period to secure exam answers, according
to independent research released yesterday.
Social researcher Kem Ley’s
report Turning a Blind Eye purported that 92 per cent of students were
involved in bribery or cheating during the exam, which is conducted
under the supervision of high- school proctors, teachers and police
officials.
“We also see that 55 per cent of
answers were copied from their hand phone after the answer was made and
sent around by email,” Ley said, noting social media site Facebook had
emerged as a popular means to cheat during this year’s exams, which took
place on August 6 and 7.
“However, while this is a
self-formed habit to bribe the [exam supervisors], this year there was a
bit of improvement compared to last year,” he said, pointing to more
diligent monitoring of exam rooms by police officials as stemming the
amount of exam answer cheat sheets physically used by students.
The 40-page research findings
from interviews with 157 students will be sent to the Ministry of
Education and government development partners UNESCO and UNICEF next
week, Ley told the Post, in a bid to put pressure on the government to
reform the education system.
For Ley, the solution lies in
improving the quality and ethics of teachers and exam invigilators
through appropriate remuneration or up to $150 per day during the exam
period.
Rong Chhun, president of the
Cambodian Independent Teacher Association, agreed that exam
irregularities greatly diminished the quality of the education system in
Cambodia.
“It isn’t a new thing. Although
it was quieter around exam rooms this year, that is because they are
copying via email and Facebook,” Chhun said.
He added that if the government
did not deal with the quality of education in Cambodia, it could not
produce a competitive labour force for the 2015 ASEAN integration.
Sam Sereyrath, general director
at the Ministry of Education, said the research was a somewhat “small
sample”, so it was incapable of evaluating the whole high-school exam.
“The result would have been much
more positive if he had interviewed more,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment