Kayanya kita kaga usah sirik dah...
Jadi inget SMA dulu, suka curiga sama yang
dapet nilai bagus. Kan kitanya aja yang
salah, kurang mau rajin belajar.

Introspeksi dong, sekali-sekali. Gimana rajinnya
mereka itu untuk belajar. Kan ujian GRE pake
komputer ini baru akhir2x ini. Sedangkan
mereka itu kan sudah dari dulu masuk MIT,
Caltech, Berkeley, dll. Apa dulu itu mereka
juga cheating..??

Think positive man...

TJ


>From: "Budi H." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Indonesian Students in the US <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: Fw: ETS Says GRE Scores From China, South Korea,
>Date: Thu, 15 Aug 2002 02:03:18 GMT
>
>Sepertinya bener juga ini......
>Terus terang saja saya sangat terkagum-kagum dengan nilai TOEFL dan GRE
>teman-teman dekat saya dari RRC, fantastis......, dan almost perfect.....!
>Namun, kualitas papernya, biasa-biasa saja ......
>
>Salam,
>Budi
>
> > Salam,
> >
> > Setahu saya, banyak teman-teman dari RRC yang nilai TOEFL, GMAT, dlsb
>lebih
> > tinggi dibandingkan dengan kemampuannya berbahasa Ingrris sehari-hari.
> >
> > Enggak tahunya ...:)
> >
> > Salam,
> >
> > Ahmad Syamil
> >
> >
> >       Wednesday, August 7, 2002
> >
> >       http://chronicle.com/daily/2002/08/2002080704n.htm
> >
> >         ETS Says GRE Scores From China, South Korea, and Taiwan Are
>Suspect
> >
> >       By DAVID L. WHEELER
> >
> >       The Educational Testing Service has told graduate schools in the
> > United States that scores on the Graduate Record Examinations from
>students
> > taking the test in China, South Korea, and Taiwan may be inflated by
> > cheating. ETS is also taking measures to try to restore the integrity of
>the
> > scores, including suspending the use of a computer-based test in those
> > regions -- a change that will affect more than 55,000 students annually.
> >
> >       ETS, which develops and administers the GRE, began an
>investigation
> > last year that checked test results in 40 countries. The investigation
>found
> > that scores on the verbal portion of the exam in China, South Korea, and
> > Taiwan were being artificially increased by the use of Web sites, where
>test
> > takers were posting questions they had memorized and, sometimes, the
>answers
> > to the questions. Toward the end of the cycle in which the same pool of
> > questions was used for the tests, national average scores were
>increasing by
> > as much as 100 points in China, and 50 points in South Korea and Taiwan,
>on
> > the standard range of scores from 200 to 800. ETS informed graduate
>deans of
> > the problem in a letter that was mailed on July 31.
> >
> >       The score increases occurred only on the verbal portion of the
>test.
> > The GRE also has quantitative and analytical sections. ETS hypothesizes
>that
> > with the scores already high on the latter two sections, because of the
>high
> > performance of test takers in the region, it was impossible even for
> > cheaters to increase the average scores on those portions of the test.
> >
> >       The ETS investigation indicated that cheating was not affecting
>scores
> > on the Test of English as a Foreign Language and the Graduate Management
> > Admission Test.
> >
> >       Carol A. Beere, associate provost for graduate studies and
>outreach at
> > Northern Kentucky University and the chairwoman of the GRE board, said
>that
> > the board was torn between needing to tell graduate schools what was
>going
> > on and fearing that it would harm the reputation of students who hadn't
> > cheated. The board was also concerned about publicizing a cheating
>strategy
> > that others might try to use. "Our challenge is to protect the test
>scores
> > and reputation of the students who are putting their honest energy into
> > preparing for graduate school," she said.
> >
> >       Ultimately, she said, the board felt it had no choice but to tell
> > graduate schools about the problems with the test, but it is also trying
>to
> > publicly acknowledge that many Asian students are achieving high scores
> > because of hard work, not cheating.
> >
> >       Although some questionable scores were submitted to graduate
>schools
> > in last year's round of admissions, and some questionable scores may be
>sent
> > to graduate schools this year, ETS is urging universities to look at the
> > scores in the context of the students' other achievements, their essays,
>and
> > their letters of recommendation.
> >
> >       To help prevent future cheating, ETS will stop using the
> > computer-based tests on September 30 and switch to using paper
>examinations
> > in which questions are only used once. In the computer-based tests, a
>pool
> > of questions is used over a period of time until the questions are
> > discarded. The advantage of the computer-based tests is that they can be
> > offered anytime a testing center is open, while the paper-and-pencil
>tests
> > require more heavily monitored administration of large groups of
>students.
> >
> >       ETS has planned two testing dates for China, South Korea, and
>Taiwan:
> > November 23, 2002, and March 15, 2003. After that, the testing service
>hopes
> > to have devised a more secure form of computer-based testing.
> >
> >       ETS regards the Web sites where students have posted GRE questions
>and
> > answers as illegal, but says that international litigation would
>probably
> > not produce the quick remedy needed. Before taking the GRE, test takers
>sign
> > an agreement saying that they will not reveal any questions from the
>test to
> > others.
> >
> >       Ms. Beere said that the Web sites in China on which students have
> > posted questions and answers appear to be nonprofit ventures, run by
> > students themselves. The students appear to be motivated by the desire
>to
> > help others, but might have been able to help themselves if they took
>the
> > test twice with minimal time between tests. For test-security reasons,
>ETS
> > will not say how long the test questions are used for the computer-based
> > tests.
> >
>
>
>----------------------------------------
>This message was sent using CBN WebMail.





Majulah Permias Columbus
Michael P Tjiptaputra
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(614) 488-0083

Visit Homepage Permias at:  http://www.theoffice.net/permias


_________________________________________________________________
MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx

Kirim email ke