Students sitting the National College Entrance Exam are likely to see cell
phone signals blocked inside exam sites this year to prevent cheating.
While education authorities said they would use modern technology to
tighten management of exam sites, the new regulation didn't bother the majority
of local exam takers.
"All of us were warned to switch off our cell
phones during the exam," said Zhou Wenjia, a third-year high school student.
"Most students won't risk breaching the regulation. It's not worthwhile."
The new regulation, which was issued by the Ministry of Education,
suggested cities - especially those with a track record of cheating scandals -
equip exam sites with cell phone signal shielding facilities.
It means
handsets won't work even if students have their phones on during the exam.
"The city will follow the Ministry of Education's instruction," said
Wang Xin, a publicity official with the Shanghai Education Commission. "But exam
site management details have yet to be worked out."
Previously, students
were only asked to switch off cell phones, rather than hand phones during the
exam. However, people could switch their phones to vibration mode.
In
June, 18 students in Guizhou Province were disqualified from the exam after they
attempted to seek help from teachers by sending exam questions via short
message.
A popular measure that exam organizers take is to install a
microelectronics wave detector. An alarm sounds if a cell phone is found working
in the classroom.
Officials said it is impractical to simply ban
handsets from exam rooms as students can hide them in many places or use other
devices.
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