[Academics] “Passed the entrance exam to Kyushu University after 19 failed attempts.” The reason why I have been able to continue taking the National Center Test and the National Center Test for University Admissions for 20 years without suffering from anxiety.
0001Defendant on the sidelines ★.Aug. 25, 2024 (Sun) 19:53:20.33ID:MZiJKRJf9
“Passed the entrance exam to Kyushu University after 19 failed attempts.” The reason why I have been able to continue taking the National Center Test and the National Center Test for University Admissions for 20 years without suffering from anxiety. The number of people choosing to retake entrance exams is now half of what it was 20 years ago. With fewer people saying, “I want to go to a certain university even if it means repeating a year,” how does repeating a year change people? Also, what happens as a result of repeating a year? Shogo Hamai, who himself passed the entrance exam to Waseda University after nine years of repeating a year, interviews various people who have repeated a year and explores the good things about choosing that path and the reasons they were able to persevere. This time, we spoke with Yamada Hiroshi, who took the National Center Test and the National Center Test 20 times, without going on to another university or getting a job, and who, after “repeat-ing 19 times,” was accepted into the Department of Electrical and Information Engineering in the Faculty of Engineering at Kyushu University. If you follow the author, you will receive email notifications when a new article in the series is published. ■ “19 straight years of repeating entrance exams” without getting a job or going on to another university So far, this series has introduced people who have continued to challenge themselves after repeating entrance exams for over 10 years. For those who have been studying for 10 years or more, many have continued studying for the entrance exams while working at a company or entering a university during their time as a ronin. However, Yamada Hiroshi, whom we spoke to this time, did not go on to higher education or get a job, but instead took the Common First-Stage and National Center Tests for University Admissions for 20 years while “making a living through part-time work,” and was able to enter Kyushu University after failing the entrance exams 19 times. If you repeat the entrance exam 19 times, it could be said that you have been repeating the exam for the same period it takes for a baby to become a university student. This time we will take a closer look at his dramatic life as a ronin. (Source below) Toyo Keizai Online Published 8/25 (Sun) 5:02 *Previous thread (★1: 2024/08/25 (Sun) 17:23:13.13) [Academics] “Passed Kyushu University after 19 failed attempts.” The reason why I have been able to continue taking the National Center Test and the National Center Test for University Admissions for 20 years without suffering from anxiety. [Window-sitter defendant★]
>>1 (´ω`) Too many repeated exams If you fail college entrance exams 4 or 5 times in a row, you won’t have a decent job, and even then, private companies and public servants will reject you because of your age. It’s just self-satisfaction, just like the voice actor who entered the lighthouse Dobunichi in his 40s.
Medical and law schools (if you’re taking the bar exam, you can try again at a relatively older age, but even then, they can be used as a reason to reject you in the interview, and there’s still a cutoff based on age. Well, congratulations on your hard work, I don’t know where you’ll be finding a job even after you graduate. There are also a lot of “anti-social” criminals. If you are a cram school teacher or have a job that is not related to your degree, you may be able to get a job as a construction worker or other job, unless you are rejected at the interview.
>>6 There’s a rich world out there that idiots who can only see things with such prejudice won’t understand. He’s mentally poor. He’s probably a middle school dropout.
Summary – When I was in high school, I went to Kagoshima University, when I was in Ichiro, I went to Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, and after that, I kept failing the first semester of the entrance exam for Tokyo University Science 1 until I failed 18 times (I took Tokyo University 18 times) – In my last year, I passed the first semester of Tokyo University Science 1 and the second semester of Kyushu University Faculty of Engineering, and moved into a dormitory – I have already graduated from Kyushu University Faculty of Engineering – After graduation, I became a cram school teacher (I studied abroad in Canada during the period) – I am currently 58 years old.
In terms of education, does this guy rank higher than the middle school dropout worker? The worker is old enough to have a wife and kids and even build a house lol.
But back in the day, there were people who would retake the bar exam, and then they would retake it for about 10 years, and still not pass the exam, and just become middle-aged study nerds.
>>24 I heard there is a limit to the number of times you can take the bar exam so I guess the old days of people retaking the exam for many years are gone Nowadays, people who retake the exam as a pharmacist are like those who retake the bar exam in the old days.
I heard somewhere that the lives of people who narrowly failed to get into a top university like Tokyo University and went on to a backup school like Waseda or Keio are not that different from those who went to a top university. Basically, it’s a person’s natural potential that’s most important, rather than the university they graduated from.
>>36 Well, it depends on the job you’re going for. If you’re a senior civil servant, Tokyo University is more advantageous. If you’re in the private sector, Keio or Waseda are more advantageous if you’re going to get a job at a major university, and every year there are younger students who will be your rivals.
Well, that’s amazing. I feel like I could have gotten in sooner if I had just wanted to get into a national or public university, but it’s good to have people like this.
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