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Education Minister Rules Out Unprofessional Approach In Admission Co

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  • Education Minister Rules Out Unprofessional Approach In Admission Co

    EDUCATION MINISTER RULES OUT UNPROFESSIONAL APPROACH IN ADMISSION COMMISSION'S WORK
    By Irina Hovannisian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug. 22, 2006

    With higher school entrance examinations in Armenia over, the education
    minister has praised the work of the admission commission, putting
    down some complaints and dissatisfaction from applicants to its
    'strict criteria rather than unprofessional approach.'

    "Perhaps they were a bit strict in their criteria, but these criteria
    were universal for all applicants," Levon Mkrtchian told reporters
    on Tuesday.

    Entrance examinations to higher schools ended in Armenia this week,
    with many teenage applicants and their parents feeling unhappy with
    the way they were handled.

    In particular, people complain that at certain examinations officials
    helped handpicked entrants with prompts, in other cases they put
    psychological pressure and subjectively graded applicants, especially
    during oral exams.

    Ruzanna Hovannisian is convinced that her daughter, Mariam Ohanian,
    was treated unfairly at the oral English language examination.

    "She had high marks from the two previous examinations and was
    subjected to psychological pressure from the admission commission at
    her oral examination. Perhaps her high marks annoyed some people,"
    Hovannisian told RFE/RL, adding that she had addressed a letter of
    complaint to the minister.

    Minister Mkrtchian admits that it is difficult to find a means of
    effective struggle against subjectivity in oral examinations. "I feel
    that the parent is perhaps right, but we have no solution. The degree
    of subjectivity in oral examinations is very high," he said.

    As was expected, the threshold for entering an institute or university
    faculty has lowered a little this year as compared to the previous
    years, with the exception of competitions for the law departments at
    the Yerevan State University, Armenia's biggest and most prestigious
    higher school.

    To gather 57.5 points (out of 60) is likely to be enough for an
    applicant to become a student at the University's law department
    studying free of charge. To be admitted to the paid section of the
    department one is likely to score at least 55 points. The sufficient
    points for the free sections of the University's English language,
    economics and history departments are likely to be 58, 57.5, and 55,
    respectively. The highest score for the world economics department of
    the University of Economics is expected to be 55. And for the Medical
    University's therapy department it is likely to be 36.5.

    The minister expressed his concern over the dropping competition
    for some departments of the Engineering University. Competition is
    particularly low for natural sciences departments, where satisfactory
    marks from two examinations are enough for admission. "Sending
    their children to train as economists, lawyers or diplomats parents
    in fact condemn them to future unemployment, as, for example, our
    small country hardly needs more than a hundred diplomats every year,"
    Mkrtchian stressed.

    The final results of the entrance examinations will become available
    on August 24.
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