Unified State Exam

The Unified State Exam (Russian: Единый государственный экзамен, ЕГЭ, Yediniy gosudarstvenniy ekzamen, EGE) is an exam in the Russian Federation. It is in fact a series of exams every student must pass after graduation from school to enter a university or a professional college. Since 2009, the USE is the only form of graduation examinations in schools and the main form of preliminary examinations in universities. A student can take a USE in the Russian language, mathematics, foreign languages (English, German, French, Spanish, Chinese), physics, chemistry, biology, geography, literature, history, basics of social sciences and computing science.[1][2][3] The USE in the Russian language and mathematics are obligatory; that means that every student needs to get the necessary results in these subjects to enter any Russian university or get a high school diploma.

USE answer sheet No. 1

History

The USE was introduced in Russia in 2001 first as an educational experiment, initially held in a few regions of Russia: Chuvashia, Mari El, Yakutia, as well as in Samara and Rostov Oblasts. The first experimental examination was only held by the eight general classes. In 2002 this experiment was continued in 16 regions of Russia, expanded to 47 regions in 2003, then in 2006 about 950 thousand school graduates took the test all over Russia. In 2008 that number rose to more than one million graduates. The list of schools and classes to take part in the USE in 2001–2008 was determined by local public education authorities in the regions of Russia.

At present the USE is administered by the Ministry of Education and Science together with the regional and local public education authorities.

Structure

The task for each subject USE test consists of two parts (with the exception of the ones in mathematics and literature): I and II.

The I part contains tasks in which student must give a short written answer, usually several letters or numbers.

The II part contains one or several tasks in which student must use their creativity to complete them. For example, one can be given a hard mathematical exercise to solve, a composition to write or a question to answer argumentatively. Unlike the previous part, which is checked by a computer, this part is checked by three experts of the regional examination committee.

Paper forms

There are four stationery forms used in the course of each subject USE test: the registration form, the answer sheet No. 1 (which is used to record answers for parts A and B), the primary answer sheet No. 2 (used to write answers for Part C), and the additional answer sheet No. 2 (handed out only if the primary sheet No. 2 gets filled up).

Rules for registration and filling the headers and answers in the forms of the USE are quite strict and are described in a special instruction. Failure to adhere to the guidelines while filling the forms may result in uncredited answers and void examinations.

Sources

gollark: (30MB of which is tailscale)
gollark: Anyway, Alpine is quite minimal, I think. All the processes conveniently fit onto my screen in htop (half are just tailscale ones), and it's using 52MB of memory.
gollark: (Pis before the Raspberry Pi 3 *do not* exist.)
gollark: Well, 1-8GB, but my specific model 1GB.
gollark: This is actually bad.
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