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U.S. test board cancels results of 357 Chinese high school applicants

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2015-10-22 08:46Global Times Editor: Li Yan

A total of 357 Chinese students, who took a required admissions test for many high schools in the U.S. and other countries in September, were recently informed of the cancelation of their results, media reported on Wednesday.

Students, who took the Upper Level Secondary School Admission Test (SSAT), were informed of the cancellation through e-mail from the Secondary School Admission Test Board (SSATB), an anonymous employee of the SSAT Country Master Distribution, which administers the test in China, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

According to a snapshot of the e-mail posted by the New Oriental Education and Technology Group, a provider of private English training services in China, on Sina Weibo on Wednesday, the test was administered on September 19 in Shanghai and Beijing to 357 students.

"Most American students get 1,600 to 1,900 points on the test, so it's understandable that the SSATB would be suspicious of the results," Cheng Xi, an English teacher who has taught for five years at the New Oriental, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

All examinees at a Shenzhen-based English training institution got a perfect score of 2,400 on the test, the Beijing Times reported on Wednesday.

Besides, many training institutions collect SSAT questions through different channels, such as sending their employees to take the test and then copy the questions, said an SSAT trainer from a Beijing-based English training center who requested anonymity

"Examinees may score higher if the questions are repeated," he told the Global Times.

"The SSATB has concluded that there is a reasonable basis to question the validity of the test scores … we are cancelling all the Upper Level test scores from this administration," read the e-mail.

The SSATB has not made any official announcement as of press time.

Regulations state that examinees can generally get their test results two weeks after the test is taken. The SSAT attracted nearly 2,000 people to take the test in January, with some 500 examinees in Beijing, the largest test site in the world, said news site china.com.cn.

  

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