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College Scholastic Ability Test

The College Scholastic Ability Test or CSAT (Korean: 대학수학능력시험, Hanja: 大學修學能力試驗), also abbreviated Suneung (Korean: 수능, Hanja: 修能), is a standardized test which is recognized by South Korean universities. The Korea Institute of Curriculum and Evaluation (KICE) administers the annual test on the third Thursday in November.[1][2][3] In 2020, however, it was postponed to the first Thursday in December (December 3), due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

College Scholastic Ability Test
Hangul
대학수학능력시험
Hanja
大學修學能力試驗
Revised RomanizationDaehak Suhak Neungnyeok Siheom
McCune–ReischauerTaehak Suhak Nŭngnyŏk Shihŏm

Although the CSAT was originally designed to assess the scholastic ability required for college, it is currently a national graduation test for high-school students. By determining the university a student can enter, it plays an important role in South Korean education. The test has been cited for its efficiency, emphasis on merit, and good international results.[4] Of the students taking the test, 20 percent are high-school graduates who did not achieve their desired score the previous year.[5]

On test day, the KRX stock market opens late, and bus and metro service is increased to avoid traffic jams and allow students to get to the testing sites more easily. Planes are grounded during the listening portion of the English section so their noise does not disturb the students. In some cases, students running late for the test may be escorted to their testing site by police officers via motorcycle. Younger students and members of the students' families gather outside testing sites to cheer them on.[5][6]

Purpose

The CSAT is designed to test a candidate's ability to study in college, with questions based on Korea's high-school curriculum. It standardizes high-school education and provides accurate, objective data for university admission.[7]

Schedule

All questions are multiple-choice, except for the 9 questions in the Mathematics section, which are short answer.[8]

Period Subject Time Number of questions Points Notes
Candidates must enter the testing room by 08:10. For the second to fifth periods, students must enter 10 minutes before the test begins.
1 National Language 08:40–10:00 (80 min.) 45 100 Q1-17: Reading

Q18-34: Literature

Q35-45: Elective (candidates must choose between Speech and Writing or Language and Media)

(2 or 3 points per question)

Break time: 10:00–10:20 (20 min)
2 Mathematics 10:30–12:10 (100 min.) 30 100 Q1-22: Mathematics I, Mathematics II

Q23-30: Elective (candidates must choose between Calculus, Geometry or Probability and Statistics)

  • 30% (9 out of 30) of the questions require short answer(one of the integers from 0 to 999).

(2 or 3 or 4 points per question)

Lunch: 12:10–13:00 (50 min.)
3 English 13:10–14:20 (70 min.) 45 100 Q1-17: Listening (25 minutes or less)

Q18-45: Reading

(2 or 3 points per question)

Break: 14:20–14:40 (20 min.)
4 Korean history 14:50–15:20 (30 min.) 20 50 Mandatory subject

(2 or 3 points per question)

Collection of Korean history question and answer sheets

Distribution of first subordinate subject papers

15:20-15:35 (15 min.) Candidates not taking a subordinate subject(s) return to the waiting room
First subordinate subject 15:35–16:05 (30 min.) 20 50 Candidates can choose up to two subjects from social studies, science or vocational education
  • Collection time is 2 minutes for each subject.

(2 or 3 points per question)

Collection of question and answer sheets 16:05-16:07 (2 min.)
Second subordinate subject 16:07–16:37 (30 min.) 20 50
Break: 16:32–16:50 (18 min.)
5 Second foreign language/Classical Chinese 17:05–17:45 (40 min.) 30 50 No listening test

(1 or 2 points per question)

Sections

The CSAT consists of six sections: national language (Korean), mathematics, English, Korean history, subordinate subjects (social studies, sciences, and vocational education), and second foreign language/Chinese characters and classics. All sections are optional except Korean history, but most candidates take all the other sections except second foreign language/Classical Chinese.

In the mathematics section, candidates are made to take Math I (which consists of Logarithm, Sequences and Trigonometry) and Math II (which consists of Limits and Calculus on polynomials), and allowed to select one among Probability and Statistics, Geometry and Calculus.

The subordinate subjects is divided into three sections: social studies, science, and vocational education. Candidates may choose up to two subjects, but may not select from different sections at the same time; Physics II and Biology I may be chosen for the subordinate section since both are sciences, but World history and Principles of Accounting may not – the former is in the social studies section, and the latter in vocational education. Only vocational high-school graduates can choose the vocational education section.

In the second foreign language/Classical Chinese section, the candidate chooses one subject.

Most high-ranked universities require applicants to take two science subordinate subjects and Geometry or Calculus in the mathematics section if they apply for a STEM major, and do not accept subordinate subjects in the same field (such as Physics I and Physics II).[7]

National Language[9]

In the National Language section, candidates are assessed on their ability to read, understand and analyse Korean texts rapidly and accurately. Its 45 questions of the subject are classified into four categories:

Common topics

  • Questions 1-17: Reading
  • Questions 18-34: Literature

Elective topics (select 1 out of 2 options, Q35-45)

  • Speech and Writing
  • Language and Media

Common subjects

Reading

This category consists of four articles, from the topics reading theory, humanities/arts, law/economy and science/technology. Each passage has 3-6 questions. Candidates need to answer questions such as, "Of the five statements below, which one does not agree with the passage above?" or "According to the passage, which one is the correct analysis of the following example?"

Passage Topic Contents
Reading theory Article about the significance of reading or a reading journal written by a student (Q1-3)
Humanities A passage about a thinker and their theories from the topics historiography or philosophy (Western and Eastern ethics, logic). The questions normally feature a single person presenting their opinions or two thinkers with opposing opinions.
Arts Focus on an artist and their works in the fields of music, visual arts and architecture.
Society (Law/economy) Common law topics are: Civil Code, Administrative law, Philosophy of law, Penal code, Commercial act and the Constitution

Common economy topics are: macroeconomics and international economics

Science Biology (especially physiology and biochemistry), astronomy, physics, earth science, chemistry and mathematics
Technology Texts generally focus on how specialised machines and systems work. Recently texts have focused on newer technologies such as 3D modelling and the metaverse
Mixed Some texts feature a combination of two topics. For example, in 2017 September mock exam, a question featuring both the arts and technology was about the scientific origin and the artistic use of concrete architecture. In the 2019 exam, science and the humanities was mixed in a text about the differing viewpoints of Eastern and Western philosophers regarding the universe.
Literature

This category consists of texts from five categories: modern poetry, classic poetry, modern novel, classical prose and play/essay. Candidates may be asked to summarise a single passage or outline a common theme between multiple texts (sometimes of different text types), among many other question types.

Elective subjects

Speech and writing

This category consists of 11 questions relating to three texts.

Question Text Text types Common questions asked
35-37 Speech Transcript of a presentation/speech, negotiation, discussion/debate Speaking style, content, audience response
38-41 Combination of speech and writing One speech text and one writing text Conversation style, context, possible issues or corrections, problems to add
42-45 Writing A text written by a student or text outline Associating the outline with the text, incorporation of various sources, correction, refuting
Language and Media

Language forms questions 35-39 and relates to four topics: phonology, syntax, morphology and history of Korean. An additional topic may be used to complete the required five, or two questions are taken from morphology or syntax. Media forms questions 40-45 and relates to the characteristics of media and the creation of an online post or message.

Mathematics

All mathematics candidates take the Maths I and II and select one elective topic from three choices: Calculus, Geometry or Probability and Statistics. Calculus is most preferred by students applying for natural science majors, while Probability and Statistics are preferred by students applying for the humanities. Geometry is the least popular, with only 4.1% of students selecting it as their elective.[10]

The Ga and Na type system was abolished from 2022 onwards, which means that students applying for the natural-sciences majors no longer have to study all three topics.[11]

Mathematics[12]
Type Subject Contents
Base subject Math I I. Exponential and logarithmic functions

II. Trigonometric functions

III. Sequences

Math II I. Limits and continuous functions

II. Differentiation

III. Integration

Elective subject Calculus I. Limit of a sequence

II. Methods of differentiation

III. Methods of integration

Probability and Statistics I. Number of outcomes

II. Probability

III. Statistics

Geometry I. Conic section

II. Vector on a plane

III. Three-dimensional figures and coordinates

Subordinate subjects

Subordinate subjects[7]
Section Field Subject Related major Contents
Social studies Ethics Life and ethics Philosophy Introduction to ethics, teleological and deontological ethics, Thomas Aquinas, Stoicism, Immanuel Kant, utilitarianism, virtue ethics, John Rawls, Alasdair MacIntyre, Jürgen Habermas
Ethics and ideology Eastern philosophy: Confucianism, Buddhism, Taoism, Korean philosophy

Western philosophy: Sophism, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Epicureanism, Stoicism, Hellenism, Christianity, Scholasticus, Protestantism, Empiricism, Rationalism, Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, David Hume, René Descartes, Baruch Spinoza, utilitarianism, John Stuart Mill, Jeremy Bentham, Kant, practical ethics, existentialism, virtue ethics, communitarianism, democracy, social contract, natural law, capitalism, socialism

Geography Korean geography Geography Geography, ecosystem and climate of the Korean peninsula, Korean geography-based industrial structure, provincial specialties, North Korea
World geography World map, climate by latitude, unique landforms, distributions of ethnic groups, languages, and resources, globalization, regional conflicts
History East Asian history History History of Korea, China, Japan, and Vietnam
World history History of the world, especially Eurasia
Political science Politics and law Law

Political science

International relations

Political and legal philosophy, electoral system, constitutional law, presidential, parliamentary and dual-executive system, history of Korean politics, civil, criminal and social law of Korea, international law
Economics Economics Division of labor, supply and demand, unemployment, inflation, trade, exchange rate, asset management, history of Korean economics
Society and culture Sociology

Anthropology

Structural functionalism, conflict theories, symbolic interactionism, social research, socialization, social groups, deviance, anomie, Émile Durkheim, Robert K. Merton, culture, social inequality, Marxian class theory, social stratification, poverty, gender, welfare, modernization theory, evolutionary theory, industrialisation, unemployment, globalization
Science Physics Physics I Physics  . Classical mechanics in one dimension, theory of relativity, electromagnetism: electromagnetic induction and Faraday's law, wave properties, semiconductor principles, torque, Archimedes' principle, Pascal's law, Bernoulli's principle, laws of thermodynamics
Physics II  I. Classical mechanics: Classical mechanics in two dimensions, harmonic oscillator, laws of thermodynamics, proof of ideal gas law


II. Electromagnetism: Electric dipole moment, Lorentz force, RLC circuit


III. Waves and light: Mathematical expression of wave, Huygens' principle, superposition principle, lasers, polarization of light


IV. Quantum mechanics: Black body, Wien's displacement law, Stefan–Boltzmann law, photoelectric effect, Compton scattering, matter wave, Davisson–Germer experiment, uncertainty principle, Schrödinger equation, wave function, quantum tunnelling, scanning tunneling microscope

Chemistry Chemistry I Chemistry Chemical formula, Avogadro constant, mole, periodic table, Bohr model, atomic orbital, spin, Pauli exclusion principle, Hund's rules, Aufbau principle, octet rule, covalent bond, ionic bonding, coordinate covalent bond, Bond dipole moment, acid-base, redox, DNA
Chemistry II Van der Waals force, hydrogen bond,   ideal gas equation, mole fraction, Dalton's law, cubic crystal system, Raoult's law, vapor pressure,   Heat of reaction, Hess's law, enthalpy, Gibbs free energy, Chemical equilibrium: phase diagram, solubility equilibrium, ionization equilibrium, buffer solution
Biology Life Science I Biology DNA, genes, chromosomes, cell structure division and cycle, Mendelian inheritance, anatomy, Adenosine triphosphate, ecology
Life Science II Deeper version of Biology I, Hardy–Weinberg principle, evolution
Earth science Earth science I Geology

Astrophysics

Atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere, biosphere

Terrain of Korean peninsula, earthquake, volcano, weathering, landslide, weather, tsunami, environmental pollution, climate change

Universe: Star, Earth, Sun, sunspot, Moon, eclipse, extraterrestrial life

Earth science II Seismic wave, Earth's gravity and magnetic field, mineral, magma, sedimentary and metamorphic rock, hydrodynamic equilibrium, adiabatic process, Ekman spiral, sea water, atmospheric circulation, star, Milky Way, Big Bang, dark energy
Vocational education Agriculture science Understanding agriculture
Engineering General engineering
Commerce Commercial economics
Oceanography Fishing and shipping
Home economics Human development
  • Second foreign Language/Classical Chinese
    • German I
    • French I
    • Spanish I
    • Chinese I
    • Japanese I
    • Russian I
    • Arabic I
    • Vietnamese I
    • Classical Chinese I

Writing of the test

The test is written in September each year by about 500 South Korean teachers through a secretive process in an undisclosed location in Gangwon. The test writers are prohibited from communicating with the outside world.[13]

Administration

High-school graduates and students about to graduate high school may take the test. After the KICE prints test papers and OMR cards, they are distributed three days before the test to each test area. In 2018, there were 85 test areas.

Test monitors are middle- or high-school teachers. Superintendents of each education office decide who will monitor and where they will go. There are two test monitors for each period, except for the fourth period (which has three, because of test-paper collection). Most testing rooms are high-school classrooms, and there is a 28-candidate limit in each room.

Except for the English and Korean-history sections, grades are based on a stanine curve. Grade, percentile, and a standard score for each section and subject are added to the transcript. The standard score is calculated by the following formula:

 

  and   are standard scores.   is the standard deviation of the standard score, and   is its average. In the national-language and mathematics sections,   is 20 and   is 100. For the rest,   is 10 and   is 50.   is calculated by the following formula:

 

  is the candidate's original score.   is the average of the original   candidate scores.   is the candidate's standard deviation.

Examples

Although the CSAT is compared to the US SAT, their relative importance is different.

Mathematics

Since CSAT problems are designed for all high school students, its overall difficulty is not too high. But some of them can be very tricky, which are so-called 'killer problems'. Here are some killer problems that were on the test.

The 30th problem in type Ga of the 2016 CSAT was:

A function   defined for  , where   is a constant, and a quartic function   whose leading coefficient is   satisfy the three conditions below:

A) For all real numbers  , such that  ,  .

B) For two different real numbers   and  ,   has the same local maximum   at   and  . ( )

C)   has more local extrema than   does.

 . Find the minimum of  .

The 29th mathematics problem in the 1997 CSAT had an all-time low correct-response rate of 0.08 percent:

If two equations   and   have 7 and 9 solutions respectively and a set   is an infinite set,  , the number of elements in  's subset , varies according to the values of   and  . Find the maximum of  .

The 29th problem in mathematics subject type B (the former Ga) of the 2013 CSAT follows:

  and   are points on the sphere  .   and   are the foots of two perpendiculars from   and   to the plane   respectively.   and   are the foots of two perpendiculars from   and   to the plane   respectively. Find the maximum of  .

English

The following question appeared on 2010 CSAT, and had a correct-response rate of 9.77 percent. The paragraph is excerpted from John Leofric Stocks' "The Limits of Purpose":

So far as you are wholly concentrated on bringing about a certain result, clearly, the quicker and easier it is brought about the better. Your resolve to secure a sufficiency of food for yourself and your family will induce you to spend weary days in tilling the ground and tending livestock; but if Nature provided food and meat in abundance ready for the table, you would thank Nature for sparing you much labor and consider yourself so much the better off. An executed purpose, in short, is a transaction in which the time and energy spent on the execution are balanced against the resulting assets, and the ideal case is one in which__________________. Purpose, then, justifies the efforts it exacts only conditionally, by their fruits.

  1. demand exceeds supply, resulting in greater returns
  2. life becomes fruitful with our endless pursuit of dreams
  3. the time and energy are limitless and assets are abundant
  4. Nature does not reward those who do not exert efforts
  5. the former approximates to zero and the latter to infinity

Preliminary College Scholastic Ability Test

The Preliminary College Scholastic Ability Test (PCSAT) is administered nationally. The relationship between PCSAT and CSAT is comparable to that between the PSAT and the SAT in the United States. The PCSAT is divided into two categories: the National United Achievement Tests (NUAT) and the College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation (CSAT Simulation). These tests are more similar to the CSAT than privately-administered mock tests, since the PCSAT's examiner committee is similar to that of the CSAT. The CSAT Simulation is hosted by the same institution as the CSAT, and is used to predict the level of difficulty or types of questions which might appear on that year's CSAT.

Although the NUAT and the CSAT Simulation are similar to the CSAT in their number of candidates, types of questions and relative difficulty, the NUAT is hosted by the Ministry of Education for high-school students. The CSAT Simulation is run by KICE and may be taken by anyone who is eligible for the CSAT. Both exams are reliable, official mock tests for the CSAT, and both are graded by the KICE.

National United Achievement Test

The National United Achievement Test (NUAT, Korean전국연합학력평가,[14]; Hanja全國聯合學力評價) is administered in the same way as the CSAT, and was introduced in 2002 to relieve dependence on private mock tests. High-school students may apply to take the test, and local education offices decide whether it will be administered in their districts. Every office of education in South Korea normally participates in the NUAT to prepare students for the CSAT, and the number of applicants parallels the CSAT. The Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education,[15] Busan Metropolitan Office of Education[16] (freshmen and sophomores), Gyeonggi-do Office of Education,[17] and Incheon Office of Education[18] take turns creating the questions, and the KICE grades the test and issues report cards.

The basic structure of the exam is identical to the CSAT. For mathematics, social studies, science and second language, its range is determined by when it is conducted.[a][19] In the Korean and English sections, the questions are not directly from textbooks but are constructed in accordance with the curriculum.

As of 2014, there are four NUATs per year; it is not the same for every district, however, and some have only two exams per year for freshmen and sophomores. The NUAT for freshmen and sophomores is held in March, June, September and November; seniors are tested in March, April, July and October to avoid conflict with June and September, when the CSAT Simulation is given.

Administering institutions

  • March: Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (seniors; freshmen and sophomores, 2006–2009, 2014), Busan Metropolitan Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores, 2010–2013)
  • April: Gyeonggi-do Office of Education (seniors, since 2003)
  • June: Busan Metropolitan Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores, 2014), Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores 2002–2004, 2010–2013; seniors 2002), Incheon Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores 2005–2009)
  • July: Incheon Office of Education (seniors since 2007), Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (2005)[20]
  • September: Incheon Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores since 2010), Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores 2004–2008), Busan Metropolitan Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores 2009)
  • October: Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (seniors)
  • November: Gyeonggi-do Office of Education (freshmen and sophomores, except 2003)
  • December: Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (freshmen 2003)[21]

College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation

The College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation (CSAT Simulation, Korean대학수학능력시험 모의평가[22]) is given by KICE. Unlike the NUAT, anyone who is eligible for the CSAT may also take this test. The CSAT Simulation was introduced after the CSAT failed to set the proper difficulty level in 2001 and 2002.[clarification needed] First implemented in 2002, it was held only in September during its early years. The test has been given twice a year, in June and September, since 2004. It covers everything in the curriculum for the Korean- and second-language sections, and two-thirds of what the CSAT covers for the other sections. The September exam covers everything in every section, like the CSAT. The number of questions and test time per section is identical to the CSAT.

History

Since the liberation of Korea, South Korea has changed its methods of university and college admission from twelve to sixteen times.[23] The policies ranged from allowing colleges to choose students to outlawing hagwons. Parents and students have had difficulty adjusting to the changes.[24] The changes have been cited as evidence of systemic instability and the sensitivity of the admission process to public opinion.[25]

University and college admissions were first left to the universities, and the first CSAT incarnation appeared at the beginning of 1960. The Supreme Council for National Reconstruction established an early CSAT from 1962 to 1963 as a qualification test for students. Due to the small number of students passing the test, colleges soon had a student shortage. The admissions process was criticized as inefficient, and the government scrapped the policy from 1964 to 1968. A similar policy was adopted in 1969 by the Third Republic of Korea, and the new test was the Preliminary College Entrance Examination (대학입학예비고사); it continued, mostly unchanged, until 1981.[24][25][26] That year, the policy was significantly changed. The test name was changed to Preliminary College Preparations Examination (대학예비고사), and hagwons (cram schools) were outlawed. In 1982, the test name was changed again to College Entrance Strength Test (대입학력고사).[24][25]

The current CSAT system was established in 1993, and has undergone several revisions since then.[2][27] In 2004, the government of South Korea introduced a 2008 College Admissions Change Proposal; however, it failed to bring about significant changes.[24]

Present day

The test, based on national-standard textbooks, is designed to encourage cognitive skills. The Korea Institute of Curriculum and Evaluation creates the problems, prints and corrects the tests, supervises the test-making, and sets the test fee. The problems are created by KICE members who are university professors and high-school teachers. Two groups make the problems: one creates them, and the other checks them. The creators are primarily professors, although high-school teachers have been included since 2000. The problem-checkers are high-school teachers. Both groups sign non-disclosure agreements with the KICE. In 2012, there was a total of 696 staff members involved in creating the problems. A member of the group earns about $300 per day.[28]

The 2016 subjects were national language, mathematics, English, Korean history, social studies/science/vocational education, and foreign language/Hanja. Although students may choose all (or some) of the subjects, Korean history is required.

Social studies is divided into life and ethics, ethics and ideologies, Korean geography, world geography, East Asian history, world history, law and politics, society and culture, and economics; students may choose two subjects. In the science section, students can choose two subjects from Physics 1 and 2, Chemistry 1 and 2, Biology 1 and 2, and Earth Science 1 and 2. Vocational education is divided into agricultural science, industry, commerce, oceanography, and home economics; students must choose one subject. However, vocational education may only be taken if the student has completed 80 percent of the expert studies.[clarification needed] Foreign language is divided into German 1, French 1, Spanish 1, Chinese 1, Japanese 1, Russian 1, Arabic 1, basic Vietnamese, and Classical Chinese 1. Students can choose one subject.[27]

After the test, the administrators collect, scan and correct them. The test correction (confirming the documentation and grades) and printing the results take about one month.[27] However, test takers sometimes use unofficial websites to figure out how well they performed soon after taking the test.[13]

The test is taken seriously and day-to-day operations are halted or delayed on test day.[5] Many shops, flights, military training, construction projects, banks, and other activities and establishments are closed or canceled. The KRX stock market opens late.[13] Neither students nor administrators may bring in cell phones, books, newspapers, food, or any other material which could distract other test-takers. Most complaints after the test involve administrator actions such as talking, opening windows, standing in front of a desk, sniffling, clicking a computer mouse, eating candy, and walking. Administrators are warned against doing anything which could distract students in any way.[29]

Pressure to perform well on the CSAT has been linked to psychological stress, depression and suicide.[30][31] The highly competitive exam is also cited as a contributing factor to South Korea's declining birth rate, as parents feel pressure to pay for expensive hagwon cram schools to help their children study.[13] Critics also say that students from wealthier families have an advantage due to the prevalence of cram schools, and that the test detracts from students' education with its emphasis on rote memorization and topics that are distinct from the curriculum followed in schools.[32]

Number of applicants [33]

Curriculum Year Applicants Examinees Percentage
5th Curriculum 1993 (1st) 742,668 716,326 96.45%
1993 (2nd) 750,181 726,634 96.86%
1994 781,749 757,448 96.89%
1995 840,661 809,867 96.34%
1996 824,374 795,338 96.48%
1997 885,321 854,272 96.49%
6th Curriculum 1998 868,643 839,837 96.68%
1999 896,122 868,366 96.90%
2000 872,297 850,305 97.48%
2001 739,129 718,441 97.20%
2002 675,922 655,384 96.96%
2003 674,154 642,583 95.32%
7th Curriculum 2004 610,257 574,218 94.09%
2005 593,806 554,345 93.35%
2006 588,899 551,884 93.71%
2007 584,934 550,588 94.13%
2008 588,839 559,475 95.01%
2009 677,834 638,216 94.16%
2010 712,227 668,991 93.93%
2011 693,631 648,946 93.56%
2012 668,522 621,336 92.94%
2013 650,747 606,813 93.25%
2014 640,621 594,835 92.85%
2015 631,187 585,332 92.74%
2009 Revisions 2016 605,987 552,297 91.14%
2017 593,527 531,327 89.52%
2018 594,924 530,220 89.12%
2019 548,734 484,737 88.34%
2015 Revisions 2020 493,433 421,034 85.33%
2021 509,821 448,138 87.90%
2022 508,030 447,669 88.10%

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As of 2013, mathematics, social studies and science section on March exams covers the previous year's curriculum for freshmen and sophomores; in other months, the exams normally follows the curriculum. For freshmen, there are ethics, Korean history, geography, and general social studies in the social-studies section; physics, chemistry, biology, and earth science in the science section. The categories are the same for sophomores only on the March exam. After March, social studies include all subjects: geography of Korea, world geography, East Asian history, world history, law and politics, economics, society and culture, life and ethics, and ethics and thought; the science section covers level I subjects (Physics I, Chemistry I, Biology I, and Earth Science I).

References

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  2. ^ a b "대학⌒수학⌒능력⌒시험大學修學能力試驗". NAVER Corp. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  3. ^ "2017년 대학수학능력시험부터 문과 • 이과 구분 폐지 검토…한국사 필수". Sportworldi.com. August 27, 2013. from the original on October 20, 2013. Retrieved October 11, 2013.
  4. ^ "The One-shot Society". The Economist Limited Newspaper 2013. December 17, 2011. from the original on December 5, 2013. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c "South Korean students' 'year of hell' culminates with exams day". Cable News Network. November 10, 2011. from the original on October 20, 2013. Retrieved October 11, 2013.
  6. ^ "The All-Work, No-Play Culture Of South Korean Education". NPR. from the original on March 22, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c "Plan for 2019 CSAT". www.moe.go.kr. from the original on May 9, 2021. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  8. ^ "KICE's homepage introducing CSAT". www.suneung.re.kr. from the original on July 16, 2017. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  9. ^ "대학수학능력시험/국어 영역 - 나무위키". namu.wiki. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  10. ^ "[2023 수능] 3월 학평 선택과목 응시자 비율 변화…수능 대비 방법은?". 에듀진 인터넷 교육신문 (in Korean). April 15, 2022. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  11. ^ "대학수학능력시험/수학 영역/2015 개정 교육과정 - 나무위키". namu.wiki. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  12. ^ "2015 개정 교육과정/고등학교/수학과/교과 목차 - 나무위키". namu.wiki. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d "Suneung: The day silence falls over South Korea". BBC News. November 26, 2018. from the original on November 21, 2021. Retrieved November 21, 2021.
  14. ^ ko:전국연합학력평가
  15. ^ "서울특별시교육청 학력평가 자료실". Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education. from the original on June 5, 2014. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  16. ^ . Busan Metropolitan Office of Education. Archived from the original on November 8, 2014.
  17. ^ "경기도교육청 학력평가 자료실". Gyeonggi-do Office of Education.
  18. ^ "인천시교육청 학력평가 자료실". Incheon Office of Education. from the original on November 8, 2014. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  19. ^ As of 2014, the Career Exploration and Second Language sections are tested only in the year's last exam: the November exam for sophomores and the October exam for seniors. The Career Exploration section covers every subject, and the Second Language section covers German, French, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, and Russian.
  20. ^ The Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education temporarily took charge of testing in 2005, and it was taken over by the Incheon Office of Education in 2007.
  21. ^ It was a special occasion to take the exam in December instead of November. Sophomores took the NUAT prepared by KICE.
  22. ^ ko:대학수학능력시험#.EB.8C.80.ED.95.99.EC.88.98.ED.95.99.EB.8A.A5.EB.A0.A5.EC.8B.9C.ED.97.98 .EB.AA.A8.EC.9D.98.ED.8F.89.EA.B0.80
  23. ^ "수능 대박나세요!". NAVER Corp. Archived from the original on October 12, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  24. ^ a b c d "대입제도 변천사, 4년마다 손질… 입시현장 혼선 초래". Segye.com. from the original on October 14, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  25. ^ a b c "입시제도". Academy of Korean Studies. from the original on October 15, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  26. ^ "대학입학예비고사[preliminary college entrance examination,大學入學豫備考査]". Doosan Cooperation. from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  27. ^ a b c "대학수학능력시험[大學修學能力試驗]". Doosan Corporation. from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  28. ^ "대학수학능력시험 문제 출제과정". NAVER Corp. from the original on October 4, 2022. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  29. ^ "수능시험일 감독관도 '조심 또 조심'". NAVER Corp. from the original on October 15, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
  30. ^ The Psychological Well-being of East Asian Youth. V 2. Quality of Life in Asia. Yi, Chin-Chun. Academic Achievement-Oriented Society and Its Relationship to the Psychological Well-Being of Korean Adolescents. 2013-01-01. A Ahn, Sun-Young. Baek, Hye-Jeong. P 265-279
  31. ^ Liang Choon Wang, The Deadly Effect of High-Stakes Testing on Teenagers with Reference-Dependent Preferences, [1] October 4, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ "'It's destroying education': dissent over South Korea's 8-hour college exam". South China Morning Post. November 18, 2021. from the original on October 4, 2022. Retrieved November 21, 2021.
  33. ^ "대학수학능력시험/역사 - 나무위키". from the original on April 27, 2022. Retrieved April 27, 2022.

External links

  • Korea Institute for Curriculum and Evaluation
  • College Scholastic Ability Test
  • Castle, Jody-Lan (March 3, 2016). "Top 10 exam rituals from stressed students across Asia". BBC.

college, scholastic, ability, test, csat, korean, 대학수학능력시험, hanja, 大學修學能力試驗, also, abbreviated, suneung, korean, 수능, hanja, 修能, standardized, test, which, recognized, south, korean, universities, korea, institute, curriculum, evaluation, kice, administers, ann. The College Scholastic Ability Test or CSAT Korean 대학수학능력시험 Hanja 大學修學能力試驗 also abbreviated Suneung Korean 수능 Hanja 修能 is a standardized test which is recognized by South Korean universities The Korea Institute of Curriculum and Evaluation KICE administers the annual test on the third Thursday in November 1 2 3 In 2020 however it was postponed to the first Thursday in December December 3 due to the COVID 19 pandemic College Scholastic Ability TestHangul대학수학능력시험Hanja大學修學能力試驗Revised RomanizationDaehak Suhak Neungnyeok SiheomMcCune ReischauerTaehak Suhak Nŭngnyŏk ShihŏmAlthough the CSAT was originally designed to assess the scholastic ability required for college it is currently a national graduation test for high school students By determining the university a student can enter it plays an important role in South Korean education The test has been cited for its efficiency emphasis on merit and good international results 4 Of the students taking the test 20 percent are high school graduates who did not achieve their desired score the previous year 5 On test day the KRX stock market opens late and bus and metro service is increased to avoid traffic jams and allow students to get to the testing sites more easily Planes are grounded during the listening portion of the English section so their noise does not disturb the students In some cases students running late for the test may be escorted to their testing site by police officers via motorcycle Younger students and members of the students families gather outside testing sites to cheer them on 5 6 Contents 1 Purpose 2 Schedule 3 Sections 3 1 National Language 9 3 1 1 Common subjects 3 1 1 1 Reading 3 1 1 2 Literature 3 1 2 Elective subjects 3 1 2 1 Speech and writing 3 1 2 2 Language and Media 3 2 Mathematics 3 3 Subordinate subjects 4 Writing of the test 5 Administration 6 Examples 6 1 Mathematics 6 2 English 7 Preliminary College Scholastic Ability Test 7 1 National United Achievement Test 7 1 1 Administering institutions 7 2 College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation 8 History 9 Present day 10 Number of applicants 33 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksPurpose EditThe CSAT is designed to test a candidate s ability to study in college with questions based on Korea s high school curriculum It standardizes high school education and provides accurate objective data for university admission 7 Schedule EditAll questions are multiple choice except for the 9 questions in the Mathematics section which are short answer 8 Period Subject Time Number of questions Points NotesCandidates must enter the testing room by 08 10 For the second to fifth periods students must enter 10 minutes before the test begins 1 National Language 08 40 10 00 80 min 45 100 Q1 17 Reading Q18 34 LiteratureQ35 45 Elective candidates must choose between Speech and Writing or Language and Media 2 or 3 points per question Break time 10 00 10 20 20 min 2 Mathematics 10 30 12 10 100 min 30 100 Q1 22 Mathematics I Mathematics II Q23 30 Elective candidates must choose between Calculus Geometry or Probability and Statistics 30 9 out of 30 of the questions require short answer one of the integers from 0 to 999 2 or 3 or 4 points per question Lunch 12 10 13 00 50 min 3 English 13 10 14 20 70 min 45 100 Q1 17 Listening 25 minutes or less Q18 45 Reading 2 or 3 points per question Break 14 20 14 40 20 min 4 Korean history 14 50 15 20 30 min 20 50 Mandatory subject 2 or 3 points per question Collection of Korean history question and answer sheets Distribution of first subordinate subject papers 15 20 15 35 15 min Candidates not taking a subordinate subject s return to the waiting roomFirst subordinate subject 15 35 16 05 30 min 20 50 Candidates can choose up to two subjects from social studies science or vocational education Collection time is 2 minutes for each subject 2 or 3 points per question Collection of question and answer sheets 16 05 16 07 2 min Second subordinate subject 16 07 16 37 30 min 20 50Break 16 32 16 50 18 min 5 Second foreign language Classical Chinese 17 05 17 45 40 min 30 50 No listening test 1 or 2 points per question Sections EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2021 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The CSAT consists of six sections national language Korean mathematics English Korean history subordinate subjects social studies sciences and vocational education and second foreign language Chinese characters and classics All sections are optional except Korean history but most candidates take all the other sections except second foreign language Classical Chinese In the mathematics section candidates are made to take Math I which consists of Logarithm Sequences and Trigonometry and Math II which consists of Limits and Calculus on polynomials and allowed to select one among Probability and Statistics Geometry and Calculus The subordinate subjects is divided into three sections social studies science and vocational education Candidates may choose up to two subjects but may not select from different sections at the same time Physics II and Biology I may be chosen for the subordinate section since both are sciences but World history and Principles of Accounting may not the former is in the social studies section and the latter in vocational education Only vocational high school graduates can choose the vocational education section In the second foreign language Classical Chinese section the candidate chooses one subject Most high ranked universities require applicants to take two science subordinate subjects and Geometry or Calculus in the mathematics section if they apply for a STEM major and do not accept subordinate subjects in the same field such as Physics I and Physics II 7 National Language 9 Edit In the National Language section candidates are assessed on their ability to read understand and analyse Korean texts rapidly and accurately Its 45 questions of the subject are classified into four categories Common topics Questions 1 17 Reading Questions 18 34 LiteratureElective topics select 1 out of 2 options Q35 45 Speech and Writing Language and MediaCommon subjects Edit Reading Edit This category consists of four articles from the topics reading theory humanities arts law economy and science technology Each passage has 3 6 questions Candidates need to answer questions such as Of the five statements below which one does not agree with the passage above or According to the passage which one is the correct analysis of the following example Passage Topic ContentsReading theory Article about the significance of reading or a reading journal written by a student Q1 3 Humanities A passage about a thinker and their theories from the topics historiography or philosophy Western and Eastern ethics logic The questions normally feature a single person presenting their opinions or two thinkers with opposing opinions Arts Focus on an artist and their works in the fields of music visual arts and architecture Society Law economy Common law topics are Civil Code Administrative law Philosophy of law Penal code Commercial act and the Constitution Common economy topics are macroeconomics and international economicsScience Biology especially physiology and biochemistry astronomy physics earth science chemistry and mathematicsTechnology Texts generally focus on how specialised machines and systems work Recently texts have focused on newer technologies such as 3D modelling and the metaverseMixed Some texts feature a combination of two topics For example in 2017 September mock exam a question featuring both the arts and technology was about the scientific origin and the artistic use of concrete architecture In the 2019 exam science and the humanities was mixed in a text about the differing viewpoints of Eastern and Western philosophers regarding the universe Literature Edit This category consists of texts from five categories modern poetry classic poetry modern novel classical prose and play essay Candidates may be asked to summarise a single passage or outline a common theme between multiple texts sometimes of different text types among many other question types Elective subjects Edit Speech and writing Edit This category consists of 11 questions relating to three texts Question Text Text types Common questions asked35 37 Speech Transcript of a presentation speech negotiation discussion debate Speaking style content audience response38 41 Combination of speech and writing One speech text and one writing text Conversation style context possible issues or corrections problems to add42 45 Writing A text written by a student or text outline Associating the outline with the text incorporation of various sources correction refutingLanguage and Media Edit Language forms questions 35 39 and relates to four topics phonology syntax morphology and history of Korean An additional topic may be used to complete the required five or two questions are taken from morphology or syntax Media forms questions 40 45 and relates to the characteristics of media and the creation of an online post or message Mathematics Edit All mathematics candidates take the Maths I and II and select one elective topic from three choices Calculus Geometry or Probability and Statistics Calculus is most preferred by students applying for natural science majors while Probability and Statistics are preferred by students applying for the humanities Geometry is the least popular with only 4 1 of students selecting it as their elective 10 The Ga and Na type system was abolished from 2022 onwards which means that students applying for the natural sciences majors no longer have to study all three topics 11 Mathematics 12 Type Subject ContentsBase subject Math I I Exponential and logarithmic functions II Trigonometric functionsIII SequencesMath II I Limits and continuous functions II DifferentiationIII IntegrationElective subject Calculus I Limit of a sequence II Methods of differentiationIII Methods of integrationProbability and Statistics I Number of outcomes II ProbabilityIII StatisticsGeometry I Conic section II Vector on a planeIII Three dimensional figures and coordinatesSubordinate subjects Edit Subordinate subjects 7 Section Field Subject Related major ContentsSocial studies Ethics Life and ethics Philosophy Introduction to ethics teleological and deontological ethics Thomas Aquinas Stoicism Immanuel Kant utilitarianism virtue ethics John Rawls Alasdair MacIntyre Jurgen HabermasEthics and ideology Eastern philosophy Confucianism Buddhism Taoism Korean philosophy Western philosophy Sophism Socrates Plato Aristotle Epicureanism Stoicism Hellenism Christianity Scholasticus Protestantism Empiricism Rationalism Francis Bacon Thomas Hobbes David Hume Rene Descartes Baruch Spinoza utilitarianism John Stuart Mill Jeremy Bentham Kant practical ethics existentialism virtue ethics communitarianism democracy social contract natural law capitalism socialismGeography Korean geography Geography Geography ecosystem and climate of the Korean peninsula Korean geography based industrial structure provincial specialties North KoreaWorld geography World map climate by latitude unique landforms distributions of ethnic groups languages and resources globalization regional conflictsHistory East Asian history History History of Korea China Japan and VietnamWorld history History of the world especially EurasiaPolitical science Politics and law Law Political scienceInternational relations Political and legal philosophy electoral system constitutional law presidential parliamentary and dual executive system history of Korean politics civil criminal and social law of Korea international lawEconomics Economics Division of labor supply and demand unemployment inflation trade exchange rate asset management history of Korean economicsSociety and culture Sociology Anthropology Structural functionalism conflict theories symbolic interactionism social research socialization social groups deviance anomie Emile Durkheim Robert K Merton culture social inequality Marxian class theory social stratification poverty gender welfare modernization theory evolutionary theory industrialisation unemployment globalizationScience Physics Physics I Physics F m a displaystyle F ma Classical mechanics in one dimension theory of relativity electromagnetism electromagnetic induction and Faraday s law wave properties semiconductor principles torque Archimedes principle Pascal s law Bernoulli s principle laws of thermodynamicsPhysics II F m a displaystyle vec F m vec a I Classical mechanics Classical mechanics in two dimensions harmonic oscillator laws of thermodynamics proof of ideal gas law II Electromagnetism Electric dipole moment Lorentz force RLC circuitIII Waves and light Mathematical expression of wave Huygens principle superposition principle lasers polarization of lightIV Quantum mechanics Black body Wien s displacement law Stefan Boltzmann law photoelectric effect Compton scattering matter wave Davisson Germer experiment uncertainty principle Schrodinger equation wave function quantum tunnelling scanning tunneling microscopeChemistry Chemistry I Chemistry Chemical formula Avogadro constant mole periodic table Bohr model atomic orbital spin Pauli exclusion principle Hund s rules Aufbau principle octet rule covalent bond ionic bonding coordinate covalent bond Bond dipole moment acid base redox DNAChemistry II Van der Waals force hydrogen bond P V n R T displaystyle PV nRT ideal gas equation mole fraction Dalton s law cubic crystal system Raoult s law vapor pressure Q c m D t displaystyle Q cm Delta t Heat of reaction Hess s law enthalpy Gibbs free energy Chemical equilibrium phase diagram solubility equilibrium ionization equilibrium buffer solutionBiology Life Science I Biology DNA genes chromosomes cell structure division and cycle Mendelian inheritance anatomy Adenosine triphosphate ecologyLife Science II Deeper version of Biology I Hardy Weinberg principle evolutionEarth science Earth science I Geology Astrophysics Atmosphere hydrosphere geosphere biosphere Terrain of Korean peninsula earthquake volcano weathering landslide weather tsunami environmental pollution climate changeUniverse Star Earth Sun sunspot Moon eclipse extraterrestrial lifeEarth science II Seismic wave Earth s gravity and magnetic field mineral magma sedimentary and metamorphic rock hydrodynamic equilibrium adiabatic process Ekman spiral sea water atmospheric circulation star Milky Way Big Bang dark energyVocational education Agriculture science Understanding agricultureEngineering General engineeringCommerce Commercial economicsOceanography Fishing and shippingHome economics Human developmentSecond foreign Language Classical Chinese German I French I Spanish I Chinese I Japanese I Russian I Arabic I Vietnamese I Classical Chinese IWriting of the test EditThe test is written in September each year by about 500 South Korean teachers through a secretive process in an undisclosed location in Gangwon The test writers are prohibited from communicating with the outside world 13 Administration EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message High school graduates and students about to graduate high school may take the test After the KICE prints test papers and OMR cards they are distributed three days before the test to each test area In 2018 there were 85 test areas Test monitors are middle or high school teachers Superintendents of each education office decide who will monitor and where they will go There are two test monitors for each period except for the fourth period which has three because of test paper collection Most testing rooms are high school classrooms and there is a 28 candidate limit in each room Except for the English and Korean history sections grades are based on a stanine curve Grade percentile and a standard score for each section and subject are added to the transcript The standard score is calculated by the following formula S z s m textstyle S z sigma m S displaystyle S and z displaystyle z are standard scores s displaystyle sigma is the standard deviation of the standard score and m displaystyle m is its average In the national language and mathematics sections s displaystyle sigma is 20 and m displaystyle m is 100 For the rest s displaystyle sigma is 10 and m displaystyle m is 50 z displaystyle z is calculated by the following formula z x m 0 s 0 displaystyle z frac x m 0 sigma 0 x displaystyle x is the candidate s original score m 0 displaystyle m 0 is the average of the original a displaystyle a candidate scores s 0 displaystyle sigma 0 is the candidate s standard deviation Examples EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although the CSAT is compared to the US SAT their relative importance is different Mathematics Edit Since CSAT problems are designed for all high school students its overall difficulty is not too high But some of them can be very tricky which are so called killer problems Here are some killer problems that were on the test The 30th problem in type Ga of the 2016 CSAT was A function f x displaystyle f x defined for x gt a displaystyle x gt a where a displaystyle a is a constant and a quartic function g x displaystyle g x whose leading coefficient is 1 displaystyle 1 satisfy the three conditions below A For all real numbers x displaystyle x such that x gt a displaystyle x gt a x a f x g x displaystyle x a f x g x B For two different real numbers a displaystyle alpha and b displaystyle beta f x displaystyle f x has the same local maximum M displaystyle M at x a displaystyle x alpha and x b displaystyle x beta M gt 0 displaystyle M gt 0 C f x displaystyle f x has more local extrema than g x displaystyle g x does b a 6 3 displaystyle beta alpha 6 sqrt 3 Find the minimum of M displaystyle M The 29th mathematics problem in the 1997 CSAT had an all time low correct response rate of 0 08 percent If two equations P x 0 displaystyle P x 0 and Q x 0 displaystyle Q x 0 have 7 and 9 solutions respectively and a set A x y P x Q y 0 Q x P y 0 a n d x y R displaystyle A x y mid P x Q y 0 Q x P y 0 and x y in mathbb R is an infinite set n B displaystyle n B the number of elements in A displaystyle A s subsetB x y x y A a n d x y displaystyle B x y mid x y in A and x y varies according to the values of P x displaystyle P x and Q x displaystyle Q x Find the maximum of n B displaystyle n B The 29th problem in mathematics subject type B the former Ga of the 2013 CSAT follows P displaystyle P and Q displaystyle Q are points on the sphere x 2 y 2 z 2 4 displaystyle x 2 y 2 z 2 4 P 1 displaystyle P 1 and Q 1 displaystyle Q 1 are the foots of two perpendiculars from P displaystyle P and Q displaystyle Q to the plane y 4 displaystyle y 4 respectively P 2 displaystyle P 2 and Q 2 displaystyle Q 2 are the foots of two perpendiculars from P displaystyle P and Q displaystyle Q to the plane y 3 z 8 0 displaystyle y sqrt 3 z 8 0 respectively Find the maximum of 2 P Q 2 P 1 Q 1 2 P 2 Q 2 2 displaystyle 2 left vert overrightarrow PQ right vert 2 left vert overrightarrow P 1 Q 1 right vert 2 left vert overrightarrow P 2 Q 2 right vert 2 English EditThe following question appeared on 2010 CSAT and had a correct response rate of 9 77 percent The paragraph is excerpted from John Leofric Stocks The Limits of Purpose So far as you are wholly concentrated on bringing about a certain result clearly the quicker and easier it is brought about the better Your resolve to secure a sufficiency of food for yourself and your family will induce you to spend weary days in tilling the ground and tending livestock but if Nature provided food and meat in abundance ready for the table you would thank Nature for sparing you much labor and consider yourself so much the better off An executed purpose in short is a transaction in which the time and energy spent on the execution are balanced against the resulting assets and the ideal case is one in which Purpose then justifies the efforts it exacts only conditionally by their fruits demand exceeds supply resulting in greater returns life becomes fruitful with our endless pursuit of dreams the time and energy are limitless and assets are abundant Nature does not reward those who do not exert efforts the former approximates to zero and the latter to infinityPreliminary College Scholastic Ability Test EditThe Preliminary College Scholastic Ability Test PCSAT is administered nationally The relationship between PCSAT and CSAT is comparable to that between the PSAT and the SAT in the United States The PCSAT is divided into two categories the National United Achievement Tests NUAT and the College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation CSAT Simulation These tests are more similar to the CSAT than privately administered mock tests since the PCSAT s examiner committee is similar to that of the CSAT The CSAT Simulation is hosted by the same institution as the CSAT and is used to predict the level of difficulty or types of questions which might appear on that year s CSAT Although the NUAT and the CSAT Simulation are similar to the CSAT in their number of candidates types of questions and relative difficulty the NUAT is hosted by the Ministry of Education for high school students The CSAT Simulation is run by KICE and may be taken by anyone who is eligible for the CSAT Both exams are reliable official mock tests for the CSAT and both are graded by the KICE National United Achievement Test Edit The National United Achievement Test NUAT Korean 전국연합학력평가 14 Hanja 全國聯合學力評價 is administered in the same way as the CSAT and was introduced in 2002 to relieve dependence on private mock tests High school students may apply to take the test and local education offices decide whether it will be administered in their districts Every office of education in South Korea normally participates in the NUAT to prepare students for the CSAT and the number of applicants parallels the CSAT The Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education 15 Busan Metropolitan Office of Education 16 freshmen and sophomores Gyeonggi do Office of Education 17 and Incheon Office of Education 18 take turns creating the questions and the KICE grades the test and issues report cards The basic structure of the exam is identical to the CSAT For mathematics social studies science and second language its range is determined by when it is conducted a 19 In the Korean and English sections the questions are not directly from textbooks but are constructed in accordance with the curriculum As of 2014 there are four NUATs per year it is not the same for every district however and some have only two exams per year for freshmen and sophomores The NUAT for freshmen and sophomores is held in March June September and November seniors are tested in March April July and October to avoid conflict with June and September when the CSAT Simulation is given Administering institutions Edit March Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education seniors freshmen and sophomores 2006 2009 2014 Busan Metropolitan Office of Education freshmen and sophomores 2010 2013 April Gyeonggi do Office of Education seniors since 2003 June Busan Metropolitan Office of Education freshmen and sophomores 2014 Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education freshmen and sophomores 2002 2004 2010 2013 seniors 2002 Incheon Office of Education freshmen and sophomores 2005 2009 July Incheon Office of Education seniors since 2007 Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education 2005 20 September Incheon Office of Education freshmen and sophomores since 2010 Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education freshmen and sophomores 2004 2008 Busan Metropolitan Office of Education freshmen and sophomores 2009 October Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education seniors November Gyeonggi do Office of Education freshmen and sophomores except 2003 December Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education freshmen 2003 21 College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation Edit The College Scholastic Ability Test Simulation CSAT Simulation Korean 대학수학능력시험 모의평가 22 is given by KICE Unlike the NUAT anyone who is eligible for the CSAT may also take this test The CSAT Simulation was introduced after the CSAT failed to set the proper difficulty level in 2001 and 2002 clarification needed First implemented in 2002 it was held only in September during its early years The test has been given twice a year in June and September since 2004 It covers everything in the curriculum for the Korean and second language sections and two thirds of what the CSAT covers for the other sections The September exam covers everything in every section like the CSAT The number of questions and test time per section is identical to the CSAT History EditSince the liberation of Korea South Korea has changed its methods of university and college admission from twelve to sixteen times 23 The policies ranged from allowing colleges to choose students to outlawing hagwons Parents and students have had difficulty adjusting to the changes 24 The changes have been cited as evidence of systemic instability and the sensitivity of the admission process to public opinion 25 University and college admissions were first left to the universities and the first CSAT incarnation appeared at the beginning of 1960 The Supreme Council for National Reconstruction established an early CSAT from 1962 to 1963 as a qualification test for students Due to the small number of students passing the test colleges soon had a student shortage The admissions process was criticized as inefficient and the government scrapped the policy from 1964 to 1968 A similar policy was adopted in 1969 by the Third Republic of Korea and the new test was the Preliminary College Entrance Examination 대학입학예비고사 it continued mostly unchanged until 1981 24 25 26 That year the policy was significantly changed The test name was changed to Preliminary College Preparations Examination 대학예비고사 and hagwons cram schools were outlawed In 1982 the test name was changed again to College Entrance Strength Test 대입학력고사 24 25 The current CSAT system was established in 1993 and has undergone several revisions since then 2 27 In 2004 the government of South Korea introduced a 2008 College Admissions Change Proposal however it failed to bring about significant changes 24 Present day EditThe test based on national standard textbooks is designed to encourage cognitive skills The Korea Institute of Curriculum and Evaluation creates the problems prints and corrects the tests supervises the test making and sets the test fee The problems are created by KICE members who are university professors and high school teachers Two groups make the problems one creates them and the other checks them The creators are primarily professors although high school teachers have been included since 2000 The problem checkers are high school teachers Both groups sign non disclosure agreements with the KICE In 2012 there was a total of 696 staff members involved in creating the problems A member of the group earns about 300 per day 28 The 2016 subjects were national language mathematics English Korean history social studies science vocational education and foreign language Hanja Although students may choose all or some of the subjects Korean history is required Social studies is divided into life and ethics ethics and ideologies Korean geography world geography East Asian history world history law and politics society and culture and economics students may choose two subjects In the science section students can choose two subjects from Physics 1 and 2 Chemistry 1 and 2 Biology 1 and 2 and Earth Science 1 and 2 Vocational education is divided into agricultural science industry commerce oceanography and home economics students must choose one subject However vocational education may only be taken if the student has completed 80 percent of the expert studies clarification needed Foreign language is divided into German 1 French 1 Spanish 1 Chinese 1 Japanese 1 Russian 1 Arabic 1 basic Vietnamese and Classical Chinese 1 Students can choose one subject 27 After the test the administrators collect scan and correct them The test correction confirming the documentation and grades and printing the results take about one month 27 However test takers sometimes use unofficial websites to figure out how well they performed soon after taking the test 13 The test is taken seriously and day to day operations are halted or delayed on test day 5 Many shops flights military training construction projects banks and other activities and establishments are closed or canceled The KRX stock market opens late 13 Neither students nor administrators may bring in cell phones books newspapers food or any other material which could distract other test takers Most complaints after the test involve administrator actions such as talking opening windows standing in front of a desk sniffling clicking a computer mouse eating candy and walking Administrators are warned against doing anything which could distract students in any way 29 Pressure to perform well on the CSAT has been linked to psychological stress depression and suicide 30 31 The highly competitive exam is also cited as a contributing factor to South Korea s declining birth rate as parents feel pressure to pay for expensive hagwon cram schools to help their children study 13 Critics also say that students from wealthier families have an advantage due to the prevalence of cram schools and that the test detracts from students education with its emphasis on rote memorization and topics that are distinct from the curriculum followed in schools 32 Number of applicants 33 EditCurriculum Year Applicants Examinees Percentage5th Curriculum 1993 1st 742 668 716 326 96 45 1993 2nd 750 181 726 634 96 86 1994 781 749 757 448 96 89 1995 840 661 809 867 96 34 1996 824 374 795 338 96 48 1997 885 321 854 272 96 49 6th Curriculum 1998 868 643 839 837 96 68 1999 896 122 868 366 96 90 2000 872 297 850 305 97 48 2001 739 129 718 441 97 20 2002 675 922 655 384 96 96 2003 674 154 642 583 95 32 7th Curriculum 2004 610 257 574 218 94 09 2005 593 806 554 345 93 35 2006 588 899 551 884 93 71 2007 584 934 550 588 94 13 2008 588 839 559 475 95 01 2009 677 834 638 216 94 16 2010 712 227 668 991 93 93 2011 693 631 648 946 93 56 2012 668 522 621 336 92 94 2013 650 747 606 813 93 25 2014 640 621 594 835 92 85 2015 631 187 585 332 92 74 2009 Revisions 2016 605 987 552 297 91 14 2017 593 527 531 327 89 52 2018 594 924 530 220 89 12 2019 548 734 484 737 88 34 2015 Revisions 2020 493 433 421 034 85 33 2021 509 821 448 138 87 90 2022 508 030 447 669 88 10 See also EditEducation in South Korea List of universities and colleges in South Korea College admissions in South Korea Programme for International Student Assessment Trends in International Mathematics and Science StudyNotes Edit As of 2013 mathematics social studies and science section on March exams covers the previous year s curriculum for freshmen and sophomores in other months the exams normally follows the curriculum For freshmen there are ethics Korean history geography and general social studies in the social studies section physics chemistry biology and earth science in the science section The categories are the same for sophomores only on the March exam After March social studies include all subjects geography of Korea world geography East Asian history world history law and politics economics society and culture life and ethics and ethics and thought the science section covers level I subjects Physics I Chemistry I Biology I and Earth Science I References Edit Member Research Institute NRCS Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved October 11 2013 a b 대학 수학 능력 시험大學修學能力試驗 NAVER Corp Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved October 12 2013 2017년 대학수학능력시험부터 문과 이과 구분 폐지 검토 한국사 필수 Sportworldi com August 27 2013 Archived from the original on October 20 2013 Retrieved October 11 2013 The One shot Society The Economist Limited Newspaper 2013 December 17 2011 Archived from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved December 4 2013 a b c South Korean students year of hell culminates with exams day Cable News Network November 10 2011 Archived from the original on October 20 2013 Retrieved October 11 2013 The All Work No Play Culture Of South Korean Education NPR Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved April 4 2018 a b c Plan for 2019 CSAT www moe go kr Archived from the original on May 9 2021 Retrieved May 16 2019 KICE s homepage introducing CSAT www suneung re kr Archived from the original on July 16 2017 Retrieved May 16 2019 대학수학능력시험 국어 영역 나무위키 namu wiki Retrieved December 21 2022 2023 수능 3월 학평 선택과목 응시자 비율 변화 수능 대비 방법은 에듀진 인터넷 교육신문 in Korean April 15 2022 Retrieved December 20 2022 대학수학능력시험 수학 영역 2015 개정 교육과정 나무위키 namu wiki Retrieved December 20 2022 2015 개정 교육과정 고등학교 수학과 교과 목차 나무위키 namu wiki Retrieved December 20 2022 a b c d Suneung The day silence falls over South Korea BBC News November 26 2018 Archived from the original on November 21 2021 Retrieved November 21 2021 ko 전국연합학력평가 서울특별시교육청 학력평가 자료실 Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education Archived from the original on June 5 2014 Retrieved November 8 2014 부산광역시교육청 학력평가 자료실 Busan Metropolitan Office of Education Archived from the original on November 8 2014 경기도교육청 학력평가 자료실 Gyeonggi do Office of Education 인천시교육청 학력평가 자료실 Incheon Office of Education Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved November 8 2014 As of 2014 the Career Exploration and Second Language sections are tested only in the year s last exam the November exam for sophomores and the October exam for seniors The Career Exploration section covers every subject and the Second Language section covers German French Spanish Japanese Chinese and Russian The Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education temporarily took charge of testing in 2005 and it was taken over by the Incheon Office of Education in 2007 It was a special occasion to take the exam in December instead of November Sophomores took the NUAT prepared by KICE ko 대학수학능력시험 EB 8C 80 ED 95 99 EC 88 98 ED 95 99 EB 8A A5 EB A0 A5 EC 8B 9C ED 97 98 EB AA A8 EC 9D 98 ED 8F 89 EA B0 80 수능 대박나세요 NAVER Corp Archived from the original on October 12 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 a b c d 대입제도 변천사 4년마다 손질 입시현장 혼선 초래 Segye com Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 a b c 입시제도 Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on October 15 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 대학입학예비고사 preliminary college entrance examination 大學入學豫備考査 Doosan Cooperation Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved October 12 2013 a b c 대학수학능력시험 大學修學能力試驗 Doosan Corporation Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved October 12 2013 대학수학능력시험 문제 출제과정 NAVER Corp Archived from the original on October 4 2022 Retrieved October 12 2013 수능시험일 감독관도 조심 또 조심 NAVER Corp Archived from the original on October 15 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 The Psychological Well being of East Asian Youth V 2 Quality of Life in Asia Yi Chin Chun Academic Achievement Oriented Society and Its Relationship to the Psychological Well Being of Korean Adolescents 2013 01 01 A Ahn Sun Young Baek Hye Jeong P 265 279 Liang Choon Wang The Deadly Effect of High Stakes Testing on Teenagers with Reference Dependent Preferences 1 Archived October 4 2022 at the Wayback Machine It s destroying education dissent over South Korea s 8 hour college exam South China Morning Post November 18 2021 Archived from the original on October 4 2022 Retrieved November 21 2021 대학수학능력시험 역사 나무위키 Archived from the original on April 27 2022 Retrieved April 27 2022 External links EditMinistry of Education Science and Technology Korea Institute for Curriculum and Evaluation College Scholastic Ability Test Castle Jody Lan March 3 2016 Top 10 exam rituals from stressed students across Asia BBC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title College Scholastic Ability Test amp oldid 1151276995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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