Friday, April 19th | 11 Nisan 5784

Subscribe
June 6, 2016 3:10 pm
5

Arab Israeli Only Student This Year to Achieve Perfect Score on Jewish State’s SAT Equivalent

×

avatar by Shiryn Ghermezian

Israeli-Arab Mohammed Zeidan, pictured, was this year's only student to achieve the highest possible score on Israel's college entrance exam. Photo: Twitter.

Israeli-Arab Mohammed Zeidan, pictured, and a copy of his Psychometric Entrance Test results, which shows that he achieved the highest possible score on the exam. Photo: Twitter.

An Arab Israeli was this year’s only student to achieve a perfect score on the psychometric exam required by college applicants, the news site AlMonitor reported on Friday.

Mohammed Zeidan, from the Arab community of Kafr Manda in northern Israel, scored an 800 on the standardized (SAT equivalent) test, used to predict academic performance. Offered in six languages, it contains nine sections, relating to verbal and quantitative reasoning and English-language proficiency.

According to the report, it is unclear in which language Zeidan took the exam, but in the last five years, only two students who completed the test in Arabic scored a perfect 800. Both were from the Mar Elias high school, which Zeidan attends.

Zeidan, whose father is a gynecologist and whose mother is a teacher, told Al-Monitor he plans to study electrical engineering at the Haifa-based Technion-Israel Institute of Technology and then software engineering at a later stage. He believes that degrees in these fields will make it easier for him to find a job and succeed in the future.

Arab Knesset member Ahmad Tibi, from the Joint List party, praised Zeidan’s achievement on Twitter and Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett retweeted Tibi’s message. Zeidan told Al-Monitor that Tibi also phoned to congratulate him.

In 2014, the last time that comprehensive data about the exam was released, 65,000 students took the test, according to Al-Monitor. More than 20,000 students finished the test in Arabic, some 40,000 took it in Hebrew and 5,000 did the exam in other languages.

Share this Story: Share On Facebook Share On Twitter

Let your voice be heard!

Join the Algemeiner

Algemeiner.com

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.