I am very unhappy with the way in which the Hong Kong Examinations Authority (HKEA) has dealt with blunders in this year's A-Level exams.
I am particularly concerned about the Chinese Language and Culture exam (paper 2) held on March 30 and the allegations that details of the exam had been leaked to some students.
This matter is now being investigated by the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC). I also understand that some students obtained knowledge of exam questions through the Internet.
This placed the students who did not get this information at a serious disadvantage.
I accept that the ICAC probe must go ahead. However, candidates like myself are not so concerned about this. What we care about is how our exam results will be affected and whether the HKEA will schedule a re-sit or make appropriate adjustments.
The A-Level exam is very important. The result can determine whether or not a student will get into university. The HKEA has not indicated that it recognises these concerns. It has not tried to ease students' fears by finding a speedy and workable solution.