The narrator is preparing for his senior year of college. He's worried that his grades have gone down and that he's not going to be able to get into a good university. He asks the girl why she didn't fill in her application for admission to a good school. The girl says that she's already decided to study abroad. The narrator doesn't understand why the girl would want to go abroad when her grades are so bad. She says that if she were her, she'd go abroad to study medicine. She also says that studying abroad isn't necessary for her to get a doctor's degree because she'll have to take a standardized test to get one. The teacher interrupts the girl's argument by asking if there are other students who take the standardized test on their grade instead of their grade. Apparently, the girl thinks that there aren't too many students taking the test because they're too good at math and science to pass it on their own.
The narrator is preparing for his senior year of college. He's worried that his grades have gone down and that he's not going to be able to get into a good university. He asks the girl why she didn't fill in her application for admission to a good school. The girl says that she's already decided to study abroad. The narrator doesn't understand why the girl would want to go abroad when her grades are so bad. She says that if she were her, she'd go abroad to study medicine. She also says that studying abroad isn't necessary for her to get a doctor's degree because she'll have to take a standardized test to get one. The teacher interrupts the girl's argument by asking if there are other students who take the standardized test on their grade instead of their grade. Apparently, the girl thinks that there aren't too many students taking the test because they're too good at math and science to pass it on their own.