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Is it true that Beijing can get into Tsinghua and Peking University with more than 400 points?

Let’s talk about this issue separately. Of course, “400 people get into Tsinghua University” is a rumor. In terms of the difficulty of the college entrance examination itself, Beijing is indeed much lower than other provinces. This cannot be eliminated no matter what. I took the college entrance examination in 1999. At that time, Beijing still used the national test. Someone had already posted the provincial score lines for that year. I will only add a few details: In the daily tests in high school, especially in mathematics, physics and chemistry, when the teacher wanted to hit us, he would use Huanggang's paper (the lowest score in my life was 48 points - a full score of 150 - just From a god-like Huanggang Physics paper); and when you want us to find confidence, give us Haidian Chongwen. I don’t understand why we keep going back and forth between these two areas. This is where Dongcheng Xicheng Xuanwu is thrown... …

However, it is also unreasonable to use scores to belittle the quality of Beijing candidates. Because the college entrance examination is less stressful, Beijing candidates do not have to put so much effort into studying the subjects of the college entrance examination, but that does not mean They can't learn if they don't. Some people in Guizhi know that I am studying at Beihang University, so it is not too bad. There are six Beijing students in my class. Except for one immigrant who took the college entrance examination, the remaining five are all native Beijingers. By the time of graduation, two were admitted to the postgraduate school and two were successful in the postgraduate entrance examination. These are the results obtained under the same starting point and the same standard.

As for the remaining one who did not go to graduate school, I always admired him a little. Although his grades are average (but not bad, at least better than me +_+), in addition to playing basketball well, he also plays the violin very well. Before going to college, he was the concertmaster of a middle school student art troupe in Beijing. He has very good organizational skills and became the leader of the band very early. So when I see that many people in this topic are dismissive of quality education in Beijing, I find it hard to agree. Excluding these five classmates, the other Beijingers I met at Beihang University are basically good, and some of them can show quite strong qualities.

So I think the fairness of the college entrance examination is an issue worth discussing, and the resulting topic of uneven regional development in China can raise a lot of questions, but on the one hand, the party with vested interests should not do anything wrong. A fair system should be used to clean up the ground. On the other hand, we should not aim our guns at ordinary Beijing candidates - they are just like us, the difficulty of the college entrance examination is determined at birth, and they have no choice.