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Parents wearing face masks as a precaution against the coronavirus stand to wish for their children's safe and success on the eve of the college entrance exam in front of the government complex in Seoul, Nov. 17. About 510,000 high school seniors and graduates across the country are expected to take the College Scholastic Ability Test. AP-Yonhap |
Nearly 500,000 high school seniors and other exam takers nationwide sat down to take the annual national college entrance test Thursday, the second such exam held against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic.
About 509,000 high school seniors, graduates and others signed up to take the College Scholastic Ability Test (CSAT), a single-day five-session exam, held this year at 1,251 test sites nationwide.
It is the second CSAT the country has held since the onset of the pandemic in early 2020.
More than 100 separate test rooms have been set aside for dozens of students under self-quarantine. Those who tested positive for the virus will take the test inside hospitals or other special virus treatment centers, according to the education ministry.
Last year, the country postponed the CSAT, the biggest academic event held on the third Thursday of November every year, by two weeks amid the pandemic.
Education authorities decided to go ahead with the original schedule this year, as the country is currently under the first-stage of the "living with COVID-19" scheme.
The CSAT is the culmination of years of hard work for many students, and the government not only increases public transport to help students get to their test centers on time but also bans overhead flights during the English listening section.
The country's stock bourses and the foreign exchange market will also open one hour later than usual at 10 a.m.
Students are required to wear masks throughout the exam, and those who show symptoms of infection on the exam day will be ushered into separate rooms set up inside the test sites nationwide. All exam takers also had their body temperature checked before being let into the exam sites.
Noisy pep rallies by cheering high school juniors, which used to be a typical CSAT-day scene, were not seen around the test sites countrywide amid signs of an upsurge in the country's daily COVID-19 tally.
The country reported an all-time high daily tally of 3,292 new confirmed cases on the day. Daily cases have stayed in the quadruple digits since July 7 amid growing cluster infections.
Some exam takers hurriedly arrived aboard police cruisers mobilized to shuttle tardy students to their test sites on time.
Lee Tae-hee, a 45-year-old mother, gave her son a tight, long hug in front of a high school in Yeouido, western Seoul, before she let her son head to the exam site.
"I feel choked up. I hope he will have a solid outcome on what he has worked for so hard so far," she said. "I have been even more worried due to the COVID-19 pandemic."
She remained in front of the school for a long while even after her son disappeared into the test venue.
This year, a total of 509,821 students and exam takers signed up for the test, up 3.3 percent from 2020 when the total number of examinees fell below the 500,000 level for the first time. (Yonhap)