Chinese Exam Authorities Use Facial Recognition, Drones to Catch Cheats

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 8 June 2017 17:46 IST

Chinese education authorities have gone high-tech to catch cheaters as millions of high-school students take their "gaokao", the annual university entrance exam seen as key to landing a lucrative white-collar job.

So high are the stakes and so competitive is the exam that some students resort to cheating.

Advertisement

Over the years, students have used wireless cheating devices disguised as erasers, belts and watches. Some also use tiny earpieces to communicate with accomplices helping them outside the exam room.

The innovations have forced authorities to step up their game in response.

Advertisement

Exam centres this year have deployed metal detectors, facial and fingerprint recognition technology, cellphone-signal blockers, wireless detectors and even drones in their fight to root out cheating, media reported.

Even before the exam kicked off in earnest on Tuesday, security officers had arrested 52 people nationwide. Cheaters and their accomplices face up to seven years in jail.

Advertisement

Universities in Shandong province have banned students from taking leave on Tuesday and Wednesday, to prevent any of them from posing as real exam takers, the official Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday.

Cheating is more common for papers that include multiple choice questions such as mathematics and English.

Advertisement

Some papers, however, such as essay-writing, confound the cheats.

Essay-writing is an important section of the Chinese paper, and topics vary from province to province.

In Beijing, students this year had to write about either their vision of China in 2049, the centennial of the foundation of the People's Republic of China, or about relationships.

Students in nine provinces were told to introduce China to foreigners using key words like "Belt and Road initiative", "bike-sharing", "high-speed railway" or "mobile payment", in a test of their knowledge of economic trends.

The province of Jiangsu, notorious for tough exams, wanted students to expound on vehicles, while neighbouring Zhejiang province demanded 800-word essays on books.

© Thomson Reuters 2017

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Save The Tigers 3 OTT Release: Priyadarshi, Abhinav Gomatam Return With a Fun Fantasy
  2. Ginny Wedss Sunny 2 Out on OTT: Where to Stream This Romantic Comedy Drama Online
  1. IceCube Traces High-Energy Neutrino to Distant Starburst Galaxy
  2. Dhurandhar 2: The Revenge Now Available for Streaming on Netflix: Everything You Need to Know
  3. Save The Tigers 3 OTT Release: Where to Watch the Telugu Comedy Drama Online
  4. Mareechika OTT Release: Where to Watch the Telugu Mystery Crime Thriller Online?
  5. Ginny Wedss Sunny 2 Out on OTT: Where to Stream This Romantic Comedy Drama Online
  6. Redmi K90 Ultra Roundup: Launch Date, Expected Price, Specifications
  7. JWST Watches HD 80606 bExoplanet Heat Up by 1,100 Degrees in Hours
  8. Reliance's Jio Platforms Files for Record $4 Billion IPO
  9. Nothing Teases Launch of Mysterious New “b” Product Series in India
  10. WhatsApp Begins Testing Online Indicator, New Feature to Manage Chat Backups on Android
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.