The film more or less attacked the Indian education system: from the suicide of a stranger to the suicide of a friend around him, it was all the fault of a degree and a diploma.
The principal has always believed that only good students can get a good job if they can listen to the teacher's instructions, memorize the concepts correctly, and do not cheat in exams and do not overtime. Those at the back of the crane are not worth mentioning at all, and those dissidents who violate the discipline should be eliminated like garbage. Not so, the Polytechnic University in the film reminds me of the Chinese workers I am studying now, especially when there is a roommate like that treacherous fat man beside me. Beginning with recent reviews:
That roommate, who I call a water monster, is really going crazy for extra points. He is frantically looking for every point that can be added, so much that he can squeeze a point or two even if he abstains from the school sports meeting;
Too much to check the bonus points of everyone in the class, critically asking others to change this or that; too much to have countless disputes with the classmates in order to add one or two points;
Excessively, the monitor ordered her to correct the grades that were added indiscriminately, but in turn told the monitor to ask the counselor if she wanted to add this and that; excessive...
This water monster, like the fat man in the play, won good grades and the teacher's praise, but lost the very important friendship in life (hahaha, saying that I am a bit like the hero, I have good friends by my side, la la la la la la la la la).
Winning bonuses and losing popularity is definitely not worth it. The education system criticized is also somewhat similar to China. I hope that the Chinese workers who study in it will not be like the polytechnic university in the play... I am also a person who can't be an engineer.
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