Report: Japanese Medical School Deducted Points From Exam Scores Of Female Applicants
Tokyo Medical University says it is investigating the reports. The points deduction was apparently aimed at keeping the number of female students at about 30 percent of the class.
by Merrit Kennedy
Aug 02, 2018
2 minutes
Japanese media is buzzing about reports that a prestigious Tokyo medical school systematically lowered women's scores on an admission test in order to admit fewer women.
Starting in about 2011, Tokyo Medical University started deducting points from female applicants' entrance exam scores, according to multiple reports.
The scandal has been reported in multiple Japanese news sources, including . All cite unnamed sources from the university, and NPR has not independently verified the allegations.
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days