Level 5 public recruitment students, willingness to take level 7 ‘yes’ 38.1%
Administrative 40.2% Technical 37.5% General Diplomacy 30.1%
First K-PSAT held on the 20th… 500,000 won incentive for passing the exam
[법률저널=이상연 기자] With the 2023 national grade 7 public bond scheduled to take effect on July 22, interest in how many grade 5 public bond applicants will challenge is growing. This is because from 2021, the first written test subject for the 7th grade public bond for national positions was replaced with the same PSAT as the 5th grade public bond, increasing compatibility between the two tests. As a result, a new opportunity has been opened for the students taking the 5th grade public bond to take the 7th grade public bond.
The introduction of the PSAT from the 5th grade public bond to the 7th grade was a decision to make it easier for students preparing for civil service exams to change careers between public institutions and the private sector.
Through these changes in test subjects, the flexibility between the 5th and 7th grade civil service exams is increased, and this is actually a so-called ‘cross-examination’ phenomenon in which the 5th grade public bond takers challenge the 7th grade public bond, and on the contrary, the 7th grade public bond takers take the 5th grade public bond. is triggering
It is evaluated that these changes provide wider options for civil service exam candidates and increase the possibility of challenging civil service exams through various routes.
In 2021, when the PSAT was first introduced in the 7th grade public bond for national positions, 7th grade students were introduced to the 5th grade public bond. This is one of the main reasons that the number of applicants for the 5th grade public bond, which has been decreasing every year in recent years, has increased significantly in 2021, and it seems that the 7th grade test takers used the 5th grade PSAT as a ‘mock test’.
On the other hand, in the 7th grade bond in 2021, a large number of 5th grade bond examinees participated as’for insurance’. As a result, the difficulty of the PSAT was unexpectedly high, but the passing standard was also quite high, resulting in many of the existing 7th grade test takers dropping out.
This phenomenon is the initial effect of the introduction of the PSAT, and interest in what changes will bring to the future test competition is growing.
Last year, as the second year of the introduction of the PSAT for the 7th grade public recruitment for national positions, it was investigated that the cross application for 5th and 7th grade increased as expected. As the compatibility between the 5th and 7th grades increased, the high boundary between the two ranks also gradually collapsed.
In fact, it was found that the number of students who applied for the 7th grade among the 5th grade public bonds last year increased more than the previous year. In particular, the participation of test-takers who had passed the first round of the 7th grade public bond and the 1st round of the 5th grade public bond was also noticeable.
In a survey conducted by the Law Journal last year right after the first round of the 7th grade public recruitment for national positions, 628 people answered “yes” to the question, “Have you ever applied for the 5th grade public recruitment?”, accounting for 54.8% of the total respondents. reached This is an increase of 11.6 percentage points compared to the previous year’s survey results.
On the other hand, 519 people answered ‘no’, accounting for 45.2% of the total, which was a decrease of 11.6 percentage points from the previous year’s survey results.
Most of the survey participants in the Law Journal were test-takers who had experience in applying for the 5th grade public bond, but considering that there was a marked increase compared to the previous year’s survey results, the ratio of those taking the 7th grade public bond concurrently among the 5th grade public bond test takers stood out. can be interpreted as increasing.
Last year, the legal journal also conducted a survey asking participants of the ‘provisional scoring and acceptance prediction system’ for the 5th grade public bond last year, asking ‘willingness to apply for the 7th grade public bond’. As a result of the survey, it was found that the percentage of respondents who said they would apply for the 7th grade public recruitment increased significantly compared to the previous year.
The total number of respondents to the survey was 2,703, of which 1994 were public officials for grade 5 positions, 394 for technical positions, and 315 candidates for diplomats.
In a survey asking ‘willingness to take the 7th grade public recruitment’, 43.8% of the respondents answered ‘yes’ to take the exam. This is an increase of 7.3 percentage points from the same survey result of the previous year (36.5%), and more test-takers than expected expressed their intention to take on the 7th grade.
Also, the percentage of respondents who answered ‘I don’t know’ was 23.3%, higher than the previous year (21.5%). On the other hand, 32.9% of the respondents clearly stated ‘no’, a decrease of 9.1 percentage points from the previous year (42%).
By occupational group, 46.7% of the respondents in the administrative occupational group replied that they were willing to challenge the 7th grade public recruitment. This is about 3 percentage points higher than the overall average response rate and an increase of 10.2 percentage points from the previous year. ‘I don’t know’ was 23.2%, an increase of 1 percentage point from the previous year, and ‘no’ decreased significantly from 41.3% to 30.1%.
In the case of general administrative positions with the largest number of applicants among administrative positions, ‘yes’ accounted for almost half at 49.6%, an increase of 10.8 percentage points from the previous year (38.8%). It was 6 percentage points higher than the overall average. Next, ‘I don’t know’ was 24.6%, a slight increase from the previous year (23.3%), but ‘no’ decreased from 38% to 25.9%.
39.5% of the respondents in the technical occupation group answered ‘yes’, a slight increase from the previous year (37.1%), and significantly lower than that of the administrative occupation group. The response of ‘no’ decreased slightly from 45.2% to 43.5%, and ‘don’t know’ decreased slightly from 17.7% to 17%.
As for the diplomat candidate, 34.3% of respondents said they were ‘yes’, an increase of 8.7 percentage points from the previous year (25.6%). On the other hand, ‘I don’t know’ decreased significantly from 53.6% to 35.9%, and ‘I don’t know’ increased from 20.8% to 29.8%.
Following last year, this year, the same survey was conducted asking participants of the ‘Grade 5 Public Recruitment and Acceptance Prediction System’ about their ‘intention to apply for the 7th Grade Public Recruitment’. As a result of the survey, it was found that the percentage of respondents who said they would apply for the 7th grade public recruitment decreased compared to last year, so attention is paid to how this will affect applicants this year.
In a survey conducted by the Legal Journal right after the first test for the 5th grade public bond on March 4 this year, 3070 respondents (2138 administrative workers, 424 technical workers, 508 general diplomats) responded that they were willing to challenge the 7th grade public bond. The number of students taking the exam decreased by 5.7 percentage points from last year (43.8%) to 38.1% of the total. On the other hand, ‘don’t know’ increased from 23.3% to 25.6%, and ‘no’ also increased from 32.9% to 36.3%.
This means that the proportion of students who have no intention of challenging the 7th grade public bond or who have not yet decided has increased.
These results suggest that there is a change in the perception or intention of the 7th grade public bond among the 5th grade public bond applicants. It is interpreted as the influence of the change in the tendency of the examinees to concentrate.
By occupational group, 40.2% of the respondents in the administrative occupational group replied that they were willing to challenge the 7th grade public recruitment. However, this ratio is a decrease of 6.5 percentage points compared to last year. On the other hand, the number of respondents who said ‘I don’t know’ increased from 23.2% to 25.7%, and the percentage of ‘no’ also increased from 30.1% to 34.1%.
In the case of general administrative positions with the most applicants among the administrative positions, 43.5% of the applicants were ‘yes’, reaching 4 out of 10 applicants, but the figure decreased by 6.1 percentage points from last year (49.6%). On the other hand, ‘I don’t know’ increased from 24.6% to 26.3%, and the number of respondents saying ‘no’ also increased from 25.9% to 30.3%.
According to the results of this survey, it is expected that the application for the 7th grade public bond of the 5th grade public bond applicants this year will decrease compared to last year.
In the technical occupation group, the percentage of respondents who answered that they were willing to challenge the 7th grade open recruitment was 37.5%, a decrease from last year (39.5%), but the decrease was smaller than that of the administrative occupation group or general diplomacy. ‘I don’t know’ increased from 17.0% to 18.6%, and ‘no’ increased only slightly from 43.5% to 43.9%.
As for the diplomat candidate, 30.1% of the respondents said they were ‘yes’, a decrease of 4.2 percentage points from last year (34.3%). On the other hand, ‘no’ increased from 35.9% to 39.2%, and ‘don’t know’ increased slightly from 29.8% to 30.7%.
Meanwhile, the legal journal will conduct a national mock test for the K-PSAT in preparation for the 7th grade public recruitment for national positions, the 5th and 7th grades of the private career recruitment test, and the 7th grade public recruitment for the Presidential Security Service in 2023.
The 7th grade PSAT, a legal journal, is the most suitable mock test that was helpful in practice, and it is evaluated that it was a ‘barometer’ of the PSAT that can be used as an objective standard for examinees.
The PSAT, a legal journal, has a long history and is receiving overwhelming support from test takers and passers for its annual public recruitment PSAT national practice test for level 5.
Above all, the law journal PSAT is recommended by the absolute majority of successful students in that it is a great help in the main test and that you can practice at the actual test site.
With the know-how of the original PSAT, the 7th grade K-PSAT will also conduct a national mock test differentiated from other mock tests. As a result, not only can you objectively identify your position, but you can maximize your ability to adapt to the actual test site and practice with the most suitable PSAT for practice.
The 2023 National 7th Grade Public Recruitment, 5th and 7th Grade Civil Career Recruitment Test, and 7th Grade K-PSAT National Mock Test for Law Journal in preparation for the 7th Grade Public Recruitment of the Presidential Security Service will cut the first tape on May 20th. Then, on July 15, one week before the main test, the final test will be conducted simultaneously on and off a total of 7 times.
This year, among the 7th grade K-PSAT test takers for the 7th grade PSAT preparation students, 7 people (5 on-site, 2 online) in each session from the 1st to the last 7th, which will be held on the 20th, a total of 50 people will be given incentives to pass. . However, in the case of the first meeting, 8 people (5 on-site, 3 online) will be selected. This pass encouragement is for both online and offline applicants.
Each time, the selection is made in the order of PSAT score, and if there are more tied students than the number of applicants, the applicants are selected within the range of the number of applicants in the order of situation judgment – data interpretation – language logic.
100,000 won is paid to the winners each time. In particular, there is no limit on multiple awards for the ‘passing incentive’, so those with excellent grades can receive the award each time.
Individual notifications are made after the announcement of grades for each semester, and the scholarship is also directly deposited into your bank account. Taxes and public charges are also borne by the legal journal.
Online applicants can also receive ‘problem books, explanations, and OMR answer sheets’ free of charge. If online applicants request to send questions, the questions, explanations, and OMR answer sheet will be delivered to the desired location every Monday after the test is over.
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2023-05-11 12:38:58
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