Wednesday, January 14, 2009

FATHER REPRESENTS CHILD IN EXAMINATION SESSION

This is a lesson we need to learn and analyse. How do you rate your own behaviour in teaching your son to be a civilizes citizen if you can dare to do this?

overprotectiveness to his child which is morally, psychologically, culturally and socially damaging In the USA, you are given an exam to do in 48 Hours and return the paper to the Registrar. You do it during the time alloted, you show it to no one; even if you are allowed to get/seek help from colleagues, but you are the one who is the final author of an examination. You are not supposed to photocopy the examination paper because everyone is required to do the exam in their own time for a week (different 48 hours each according to individual convenience). When the deadline date arrives, all the papers must be submitted to the Registrar. In such a situation, help from any quarter is welcome and is not against exam ethics.

However, in this story's circumstances, it is a closed book and a time-barred exam which was required to be attempted by the student himself. The parent has shamed all parents for his unprecedentedto both of them; the child and the father.

Japan dad busted being son on closer examination

A 54-year-old Japanese man has been caught impersonating his 20-year-old son to take an exam, even getting a perm to make himself look younger, according to an official. Skip related content

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The father, who runs a medication distribution company, sat a test for a license to handle over-the-counter drugs so that his son could work with him, said an official in Nara prefecture in western Japan.

An examiner noticed that the man looked unusually old, said local government official Masaaki Nakamori.

"A 20-year-old and a 54-year-old are aged differently. But he looked like the photo on the exam admission card," Nakamori said.

The father, whose name was not released, earned his own license last year, taking the exam with a photo showing him with straight hair and glasses.

"This time, he curled his hair and did not wear his glasses," Nakamori said.

The man put his face down intently near the desk as he took the exam, he said.

"When the test monitor approached him, he admitted it and apologised. He said, from the application process to actual testing, he did it all himself without telling his son," Nakamori said.

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