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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 11, 2026

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How are the additional subjects assessed? Is it “you must have done 200h of humanities”, or additional end-of-year exams?

No idea. I presume there are written standards somewhere, with each recognized board setting their own requirements and then getting signed off by the government. My best guess, without devoting more time to the question than I can afford, is both. Mostly the latter.

My question is mainly, why don’t the coaching centres become accredited schools where you fly through the government mandated curriculum in like the first hour of the day, then spend the rest of the day on the important tutoring? If there’s lax schools where they don’t even measure attendance that well, wouldn’t a combined coaching centre + high school be possible and an immense success?

It's a big country. I've only attended one school, and that was well over a decade ago. It's entirely possible there are places like this, all I can say is that they're not the norm even today. There could be minimum teaching hours per subject, and pushback from the teachers who would feel miffed if they were only expected to conduct a single class on Shakespeare once a week for 5 minutes. Students and their parents aren't the only relevant stakeholders, teachers do have some degree of say in things.

It doesn’t have to be administered by the parent, my thought was that you could have the same tutor you’d be paying for coaching at the start of the day, then you just need basic supervision to ensure they’re studying and not playing on their phones.

See my earlier point about needing to have completed an accredited course through a school board before you're eligible for the college entrance exams. In practice, you need a school to sign you off for that. In the kind of school my younger cousin went to, attendance wasn't required. He'd come home early and attend private tuition. The best private tutors organized larger classes instead of 1:1 lessons, much more money that way. The distinction between that and "pure" homeschooling is academic.