The gaokao is “administered every June over two or three days (depending on the province),” but the SAT are administered 7 times a year. Another difference would be who can take the examinations. The gaokao are usually for seniors because for them, “no electives are permitted, only gaokao courses.” However the SAT are mostly for juniors and seniors. Furthermore the subjects on each exam is different. The gaokao “has two versions, one focused on science [and] the other on humanities.” The SAT on the other hand focus on subjects such as math, reading, and writing. One more difference would be how the teachers teach their students to prepare for these exams. For the gaokao, teachers would spend “17-hour days monitoring classes of 100 to 170 students” and there are charts that rank classes “by cumulative test scores from week to week.” The classes of teachers who “finish in last place at year's end can except to be fired.” Some of the teachers would also “pit [students] against one another in practice-test “death matches” [and] the losers must remain standing all morning.” I have never heard or seen such a thing in SAT classes. On the contrary, the teachers who teach students how to do the SAT are more relaxed and less nervous than the teachers who teach the gaokao. In addition to this difference would be the maximum score that can be achieve on both exams. The maximum score that someone can achieve would be “750 on the gaokao,” but the maximum score for the SAT would
The gaokao is “administered every June over two or three days (depending on the province),” but the SAT are administered 7 times a year. Another difference would be who can take the examinations. The gaokao are usually for seniors because for them, “no electives are permitted, only gaokao courses.” However the SAT are mostly for juniors and seniors. Furthermore the subjects on each exam is different. The gaokao “has two versions, one focused on science [and] the other on humanities.” The SAT on the other hand focus on subjects such as math, reading, and writing. One more difference would be how the teachers teach their students to prepare for these exams. For the gaokao, teachers would spend “17-hour days monitoring classes of 100 to 170 students” and there are charts that rank classes “by cumulative test scores from week to week.” The classes of teachers who “finish in last place at year's end can except to be fired.” Some of the teachers would also “pit [students] against one another in practice-test “death matches” [and] the losers must remain standing all morning.” I have never heard or seen such a thing in SAT classes. On the contrary, the teachers who teach students how to do the SAT are more relaxed and less nervous than the teachers who teach the gaokao. In addition to this difference would be the maximum score that can be achieve on both exams. The maximum score that someone can achieve would be “750 on the gaokao,” but the maximum score for the SAT would