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Student Misses Crucial University Exam by Seconds in Turkey
๐Ÿ‡น๐Ÿ‡ท Turkey /Culture & Society

Student Misses Crucial University Exam by Seconds in Turkey

From Cumhuriyet · () Turkish

Translated from Turkish, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.

At a glance

News Sources not specified Context piece
  • A female student arrived seconds too late for the second session of Turkey's Higher Education Institutions Exam (YKS) at Osmaniye Anadolu High School.
  • Despite pleas from onlookers, the exam proctors closed the doors precisely at 10:15 AM, barring the student from entering.
  • The student was seen crying outside the school after being unable to take the crucial university entrance exam.

A young woman's dream of attending university was dashed by mere seconds when she arrived too late for a critical exam in Osmaniye, Turkey. The incident occurred at Osmaniye Anadolu High School during the second session of the Higher Education Institutions Exam (YKS), known as AYT.

The exam was scheduled to begin at 10:15 AM. As the clock ticked down, the student rushed towards the school gates. Onlookers, including parents waiting for their children, urged the exam officials to let her in, shouting "Let her in!" However, the doors were closed precisely as the deadline passed.

Despite the desperate pleas and the student's visible distress, the proctors adhered strictly to the time limit. The student, unable to enter the examination hall, was seen weeping outside the school premises. She was subsequently escorted out of the school grounds, her university aspirations halted by the unforgiving timing.

The AYT session is a crucial part of the YKS, determining university placements for thousands of students across Turkey. While the exam marathon continued smoothly in other locations throughout the city, this particular student's experience highlights the high stakes and strict adherence to rules in the national university entrance process.

DistantNews Editorial

Originally published by Cumhuriyet in Turkish. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.