Essayer OR - Gratuit
Hyper-competitive Classrooms Feed the Corporate World's Narcissist Pipeline
The Straits Times
|July 09, 2025
When schools prize individual achievement above all else, they shape future leaders who mistake domination for success.
On Nov 14, 2024, South Korea fell silent. Construction sites stopped working, aircraft were rerouted from flight paths, and businesses delayed opening. The entire nation held its breath for nine hours while more than 500,000 teenagers took the College Scholastic Ability Test (CSAT). The state-administered Suneung, as it is known, determines their university placement and, by extension, their entire future.
The pressure on students to succeed has created what experts call a "life-defining moment," where performance in a single exam determines not just university choices but job prospects and even marriage potential.
South Koreans believe that doing well in the exam means getting a spot at top universities, then landing jobs at companies like Samsung or Hyundai, which will even increase marriage prospects by connecting them with people of equal social and educational background.
This extreme educational pressure produces predictable results. According to the OECD Pisa report, more than 20 percent of Korean 15-year-olds in 2015 reported they were not satisfied in their life, compared with less than 4 percent of students in the Netherlands. South Korea has one of the world's highest youth suicide rates, with teenagers ranking among the most depressed globally, largely due to educational pressure surrounding the Suneung.
But South Korea's hyper-competitive education system is not an isolated phenomenon. It represents an extreme version of competitive educational practices spreading globally, creating a generation of corporate leaders who view every interaction as a contest to be won.
EDUCATION'S EMPATHY GAP
Walk into classrooms from Delhi to Detroit, and you will find students pushed to outperform, to score higher, to shine brighter than their peers. Success gets measured in grades, ranks, and trophies. This competitive mindset spans cultures.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition July 09, 2025 de The Straits Times.
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