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Students in Sudo Electric Technical High School’s workshop weld rods together while others
hammer metal plates.
In a country that wins praise for its education system - U.S. President Barack Obama frequently
cites Korea as a model for scholastic performance - the 600 students at a Seoul vocational school
aren't receiving a typical Korean high school education, and most won't head to universities once
they graduate.
"We are now focusing on some practical skills, which the IT field or the mechanics field really
require," says GeumDonghoe, a teacher in Sudo’s information technologies department.
Although Korean students are among the highest scorers on international standardized tests, and
up to 80 percent of high school graduates enroll in a university, some say there is a downside.
Conventional schools, critics say, are too focused on getting students into top universities when
there aren't enough jobs for highly educated graduates.
Now the South Korean government is promoting alternatives to college, such as the electrical and
electronics-engineering curricula at Sudo, much of which, says Donghoe, is on par with
graduate-degree coursework.
"Once they graduate they can get into the real field right away and apply the techniques they
learned in the high school immediately," he says.
Meister schools
Sudo is one of 21 so-called Meister schools nationwide. Modeled on German academies, some of
the trade schools receive funding from the South Korean government.
South Korean President Lee MyungBak, who was on hand at Sudo’s opening ceremony in 2010,
says Meister graduates receive an internationally competitive high-tech education.
With government figures indicating that less than half of 2010 college graduates hold full-time
jobs, along with news media reports that highly-educated applicants are usurping low-skilled
positions from those with only high school diplomas, President Lee is promoting trade schools as
an alternative to university education.
Because of a partnership with Korea’s electrical power authority that guarantees employment for
all Meister graduates, students like 16-year-old Kang Seok-ho are forsaking traditional education.
"If someone graduates from university they are not so easy to get a job," says the first year Sudo
student. "Too many university graduates are seeking for a job, and [it’s] very hard."
An outmoded post-war development
Korea’s emphasis on higher education is a product of its post war economic development, says
Jasper Kim, visiting scholar at the Korea Institute, Harvard University, who teaches East-West
comparative studies.
Korean families regard a university degree as the means to improve one’s financial and social
status, he says, which lifted South Korea out of poverty during the 20th century but no longer
satisfies the needs of today's job market.
"There’s a lot of supply of highly educated, arguably over-educated people, but on the flip side,
the demand side, they all want to work for a narrow bandwidth of companies, namely the LGs
and Samsungs of the world," he says. "They only need a few people and they only pluck those
people from a certain narrow bandwidth of schools."
The only path to those schools is a high score on university entrance exams, which, he says, build
tremendous pressure on students and lower the quality of Korea’s entire educational system.
Students, he says, become victimized by an obsession to attend elite schools.
"At the primary and secondary level, that’s really where the problem is - relatively low-quality
education in which teachers effectively teach to the test," he says. "This means that they’re not
really focusing on the pedagogical advancement of their students, [but] rather how to get
students to pass a certain test, the college entrance exam, so that their placement rates at top
universities will be very high and make the [primary and secondary schools] look prestigious."
He says fixing the system won't be easy, but that government promotion of vocational schools as
an option for students is a step in the right direction.
A difficult decision
Still, the decision to skip university is a tough choice for any teenager.
Earlier this month, students outside In Jang Boys High School in Seoul cheered test takers as they
passed through the main gate, heading in to take the exam that many Koreans consider the most
important event in their lives.
Of South Korea’s 196 universities, it is only the top four that almost all Korean families want their
children to attend.
Bae Tae-il’s son, who took the entrance exam on November 10 and will receive the results at the