It's exam season again, and everybody is gearing up to do alot of the above in the coming weeks. I should be feeling like this is the end of the line, that all my secondary schooling has led up to this one moment - but somehow, I'm feeling strangely apathetic towards it. This is the fourth year in a row where I've had supposedly 'important' exams (year 9 SATs, GCSEs, AS) and now that they really are important I just don't have the will to worry about them any more. British students are apparantly the most tested in the world, and spend more of their youth at school than most kids in Europe and the US. People my age had their first national SATs tests in year 2 at the age of 6 or 7, which was already their third year at school. French and German children don't even start school until that age! From the age of 4 to 18, we're subjected to an intellect-crushing national curriculum that focuses entirely on making us into reliable little government-boosting exam-robots, ready to tick the boxes that need ticking and not much else. In reality, exams don't tell you anything apart from who is good at doing exams.
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1 comment:
Keep your eyes open and your mouth shut.
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