Teaching as a whole in South Korea is essential, especially for the rigorous and fast-paced curriculum. There have been recorded cases of teachers' behavior regarding academic discrimination and ignoring students' learning process and effects. Hagwons not only impact students but parents and teachers as well. In 2022, a mother was so concerned about her son not having enough time to study that she advertised for someone to sit with her son at a study cafe and to wake him up anytime he fell asleep studying. In an article by Suzy Gardner, she interviewed a previous hagwon educator and was told that though her job was to teach English, she "illegally" taught ballet because the hagwon she worked at didn't have enough employees to support all of the classes that they offered. The individual also said that they were so understaffed that they had to watch over at least three rooms at once, with one room containing students aged four.
Cost and economics Despite
South Korea's now decreasing population and lowest fertility rate in the world, others see them as creating an unequal footing between the poor and rich in Korea. Although most Korean children attend hagwon, according to
CNN, studies have still shown a measurable difference in educational outcomes based on the income of the parents.
Academic elitism Research shows hagwons are associated with South Korea's pervasive academic elitism and educational inequity due to their provision of supplementary education. Many students rely heavily on hagwons to improve their grades and to perform well on the
College Scholastic Ability Test, which determines whether or not a student will be able to apply to certain universities. A 2023 statistics indicate a notable increase in hagwon spending, disproportionately benefiting students from wealthier or geographically advantageous backgrounds.
Daechi-dong, a neighborhood in
Gangnam District, Seoul, which is known for its heavily concentrated wealth and high standard of living, is dubbed the "mecca of private education" in South Korea. According to a report released on March 7, 2023, by the Ministry of Education and Statistics Korea based on data collected from January 2022 to December 2022, the monthly average expenditures on hagwons and other private education for households at the bottom of the five-tier, income-based categorization with children aged 13-18, were
\482,000 – only slightly higher than the 481,000 won these families spent on food. Research shows that there is extremely high demand for private education in a highly competitive academic environment, contributing to educational inequality. Data reveals a significant representation of students from high-income districts like Gangnam-gu and
Seocho in these universities and that the matriculation rate at SKY Universities was inversely proportional to students' household income – students from lower-income households matriculated at lower rates. The influence of hagwons on South Korea's education system is also a common theme in media. In "
SKY Castle", the plot centers on upper-class families destroying each other's lives by committing identity fraud, murder, and suicide in order to send their children to the top universities and secure lucrative career paths.
Health impact The hagwon culture is widely viewed as extreme by both international and domestic observers. This pressure on mental health is not only felt by the students but also by their parents, who often face the financial and emotional burden of ensuring their children's success in an extremely competitive educational environment. Research shows that a lifestyle of lack of sleep can lead to problems such as
chronic fatigue, poor sleep quality, and an increased risk of physical health problems in the long term. As an effort to combat these issues, in 2010, the South Korean government implemented regulations to limit the operating hours of hagwons and reduce the academic burden on students.
Impact on real estate A higher-than-average concentration of hagwons in the Gangnam District, specifically Daechi-dong (대치동), has been cited as the primary reason for an increase in real estate costs in the area. In the 1970s the Seoul government made some top schools relocate to the area. The schools there have become associated with entry into elite high schools and then elite universities. Many residents feel their children need to be associated with these schools to reach the upper levels of business and success. As more parents try to move to the area to allow their children to attend these schools, the prices of real estate in the area have risen to 300 percent of similar areas in Seoul. yet after heavy criticism for only shifting the problem around and not solving it, the government canceled the plan only a couple of weeks later.
Competitiveness Top-rated hagwon slots are fought over by parents. Parents will stand outside all day to register and enroll students in top hagwons. Some believe that there is a disadvantage for low-income families as many of them cannot afford the costs of hagwons. Typically, financial assistance provides an education that helps differentiate one's value, this is where socioeconomic groups cause inequity in competition. Because of this gap, many students fight to find ways to "stand out" to compensate for not receiving the same level of education or opportunity. ==English-language instructors==