After 56 points, schools clamp down on subject hoarding

It seems the academic flex era just got nerfed hard because the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education decided to cap exam entries after one student went beast mode. They decreed that learners must stick to three principal subjects for the Advanced Level and nine for the Ordinary Level. This shift prioritizes depth over hoarding grades like loot.

The crackdown started after Mukudzei Ziveyi from Pamushana High School pulled off fifty-six points across twelve subjects. Taungana Ndoro argued that the Heritage-Based Curriculum requires focusing on quality instead of quantity. He claims this prevents burnout and keeps the playing field standard for everyone.

Ziveyi basically never slept to chase an aerospace dream at MIT. He took back-to-back tests with tiny breaks. His mom, Loise Maisiri, sold livestock to pay the fees while his dad chipped in cash. She actually wanted him to chill with fewer classes.

Ndoro insists that universities only care about mastery anyway. He also clapped back at haters claiming grades look fake, arguing that better teaching drives the high pass rates. The current rules ensure students stop trying to break records and start actually learning.
 

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