A senior high 
school graduate submitted an unconventional paper for the college entrance 
exams, or gaokao, this year, challenging the current elitist selection system, 
reports the Beijing News.
 
 
 |  A senior high school graduate 
 submitted an unconventional paper for the college entrance exams, or 
 gaokao, this year, challenging the current elitist selection system. 
 [Henan Business 
Post]
 | 
Nineteen-year-old Jiang 
Duoduo, a female graduate from Nanyang No. 8 Middle School, in Central China's 
Henan Province, scored 114 points in the June trial gaokao, a far cry from what 
she had expected. 
Jiang wanted to get zero on the gaokao to serve as a warning to officials 
about the state of the gaokao as she saw it. 
To make sure she didn't get any points, Jiang wrote her answers in two 
colors, a severe breach of examination rules. 
She also filled in the blank spaces on the paper with questions and writing 
venting her discontent towards the current education system and the gaokao 
format. 
In the space on the exam paper where students are not allowed to write, she 
signed her pen name "Heart-Broken Flying Devil." 
Envisioning "no grade divisions, friend-like teacher-student relations, 
quality education, and an innovation-oriented teaching method," Jiang vaguely 
outlined her ideal education system. 
The girl harshly criticized the college entrance exams, citing students' 
waning creativity and innovation abilities. 
In her second year in senior middle school, Jiang became bored with common 
school education and began to harbor a deep-rooted hatred of the college 
entrance exams that she had to soon face. . 
Rigid doctrines and the expectations of gaokao totally ruined Jiang's 
interest in schooling. 
She turned to writing as a release, which she has done since primary school. 
"My writings were often picked as model essays and circulated in class in 
grade school," Jiang says. 
Shrugging off the idea of a college education, Jiang foresees no possible 
fulfillment of her expectations of higher education. "Why bother to squeeze onto 
the narrow bridge?" she asks. 
When asked about her future plans, Jiang says she is considering acting or 
writing. 
"Anyway dream is just dream," she says. "I'd better be true to reality." 
Jiang's parents were kept in the dark about her plans for 
the gaokao and scolded her when they found out what had happened. She says she 
feels slightly guilty because her parents wanted a higher education for her.