this post was submitted on 11 Mar 2024
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Notes: Besides the gaokao prep starting from middle school, and taking at least 12-14 hours a hour to prep for it each day and it being mentally strenuous and seemingly decisive to your career,

the narrator talks about how the Gaokao varies per province and apparently

depending on how high your city/province's GDP is, it may be easier compared to other provinces

Other than that, though, he talks more about societal issues rather than political ones, so I think he's at worst, a good-faith Chinese lib, even considering his reddit account, which has little political activity...

Also, I've heard there are other comparable hard exams which are not necessarily hard as the Gaokao, in the comments, such as Brazil and India, thoughts on that as well

To any libs around here: If you lemmy libs want to wander on here, I'll politely tell you which instance you're in and tell you to go back your mother's skirts....

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 8 months ago

Since you @'d me, just figure I should let you know- I'm (sadly) not a Chinese citizen, nor have I been to the PRC, I come from a Chinese-Singaporean/Canadian family. My family on both sides is probably at least 4~ generations or more removed from living on the mainland...

For my thoughts on the gaokao though- yeah, I hear it's rough. Hopefully Chinese culture, and eastern in general, can slowly shift away from such draining, painful experiences towards something healthier and more sustainable. I suppose both of my parents must have had their own stressful experiences in the Singaporean system themselves, though likely not quite as bad as described. But this is the result of living in a nation of almost 1.5 billion, and in a world of 8 billion humans, and in a country that had to build itself up from ruins, rather than plunder and extort its wealth and land from other peoples- as you noted, this is the case in most of the world- and while culturally it would be better if a more holistic approach were taken, this is the world system we live in. I do hope China reforms the system though, personally I'd thought they had begun some slow reforms already.

As the other person you @'d said though- I agree with them, this person sounds like they have a absolute nonsense idea of western education and culture in general.