Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Chinese School Allows Students To Borrow Marks From 'Grade Bank' To Pass Tests

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Feb, 2017 01:35 PM
    In an effort to ease the intense pressure that its students face in China's notoriously rigid exam-based education system, a school in Nanjing has created a "grade bank" that lets students "borrow" grades so that they can pass exams, and then repay them in subsequent tests.
     
    Oh man, I wish we had something like this when I was in school, because this system sounds awesome! So here's how it works: the innovative mark bank allows students to loan marks to make up for a failing grade in any exam. But, just like regular banks, it requires "clients" to pay back the loan on time, with interest.
     
    Thus, students have to make up for the loan by scoring extra points in future exams. Some teachers also allow the students to repay the bank by conducting lab experiments or giving public speeches. Pupils who default on their loans are blacklisted by the bank, just like in real life.
     
    Mei Hong, physics teacher at Nanjing No 1 High School, in Nanjing, said that the grade bank is designed to offer pupils a second chance. "59 points and 60 points are actually not that different," she told the Yangtze Evening Post. "[But because the former means failing the exam while the latter means passing], the difference weighs heavily on students' psyches." So instead of failing the exam, the student can just borrow that 1 point required to pass, just as long as they agree to pay it back, with interest.
     
    "I was sick before the mid-term exams and missed several geography classes," one pupil surnamed Zhu said. "I failed the exam, so I am glad the "grades bank" gave me a chance to fix that."
     
    The grade bank is a pilot system introduced in November 2016, and currently only available to the school's 10th grade Advanced Placement class. Out of the 49 students in the class, 13 have already borrowed marks from the bank. Kan Huang, a director of the school, told reporters that they decided to introduce the grade bank as a way of placing more emphasis on students' growth, rather than their performance in grueling exams. He further complained that the current exam-focused education system in China has created a situation where "a pupil's future could be determined by a single major exam." That would be the infamous 'Gaokao', a national exam taken in the final year of school.
     
    "Examinations should be more about improving the learning process, instead of a tool which is used to give students a hard time," Huang told the Yangtze Evening Post.
     
    While the intriguing grade bank has been hailed as a positive change, at least on social media, not everyone approves of the system. Education expert Xiong Bingqi, for example, believes that the loan system is "improper" for exam marks, but admits that it takes pressure off of students, who now know that they can just do better on their next test. Others think that such a system just causes pupils to be less diligent in their studies.
     
    Oh, and interestingly enough, if the grade bank sounds suspiciously like a real bank, that's because it was designed by banking professionals. Kan Huang revealed that the Nanjing school invited parents who work in the banking system to help them devise the loan scheme.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Disappointed Robbers Return Snatched Purse Soon After Finding Only 500 Notes Inside

    Disappointed Robbers Return Snatched Purse Soon After Finding Only 500 Notes Inside
    True story. All thanks to PM Narendra Modi's announcement demonetising Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes.

    Disappointed Robbers Return Snatched Purse Soon After Finding Only 500 Notes Inside

    Assassination Threats Against Donald Trump Now Flood Twitter

    Assassination Threats Against Donald Trump Now Flood Twitter
    Donald Trump's shock victory in the US elections has triggered a flood of calls on Twitter and other social media outlets for the President-elect to be assassinated - and authorities will investigate all threats deemed to be credible, The New York Post has learned.

    Assassination Threats Against Donald Trump Now Flood Twitter

    Indian Automobile Engineer Sold As Slave To Saudi Citizen To Work In Camel Farm

    Indian Automobile Engineer Sold As Slave To Saudi Citizen To Work In Camel Farm
    Saudi Arabia has "zero tolerance" for transgression of a worker's rights and human trafficking, and authorities there will investigate the details of an "alleged incident", as reported in the Indian media, about an Indian automobile engineer being "sold" to a Saudi national and being treated as a "slave".

    Indian Automobile Engineer Sold As Slave To Saudi Citizen To Work In Camel Farm

    US-India 'Dosti' Is Bipartisan, Will Only Grow Stronger: US Ambassador Richard Verma

    Indo-US ties "go beyond" the friendship of the American President and the Indian Prime Minister, US envoy Richard Verma said after Republican Donald Trump's election as the 45th President of the United States.

    US-India 'Dosti' Is Bipartisan, Will Only Grow Stronger: US Ambassador Richard Verma

    Donald Trump's Win Auspicious For India, Says Ramdev

    Hailing Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential polls, yoga guru Ramdev on Wednesday termed the development as "auspicious" for India and claimed bad days are on the anvil for those patronising terrorism.

    Donald Trump's Win Auspicious For India, Says Ramdev

    Diwali Celebrations At European Parliament

    Diwali Celebrations At European Parliament
    The European Parliament, in cooperation with the Indian embassy in Brussels organised a grand Diwali celebration at its premises in Brussels.

    Diwali Celebrations At European Parliament