Hizmet-affiliated educational institutions succeed in TEOG exam

Students who attend the Anafen Dershaneleri prep schools pose with friends to celebrate their success in the TEOG exams held in November and December 2014. (Photo: Cihan)
Students who attend the Anafen Dershaneleri prep schools pose with friends to celebrate their success in the TEOG exams held in November and December 2014. (Photo: Cihan)


Date posted: January 17, 2015

The results of the Transition from Primary to Secondary Education (TEOG) exam that was administered on Nov. 26-27 and Dec. 13-14 to eighth graders across Turkey show that students who prepared for the exam in Hizmet movement-affiliated schools did better than those who studied in other institutions.

The Ministry of Education announced the results of the TEOG exam on Jan. 9, a postponed date, after three separate students filing complaints against two exam questions.

Colleges and prep schools affiliated with the Hizmet movement, a grassroots education and interfaith dialogue movement that operates institutions internationally, inspired by Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen’s views, are often successful and students do extremely well in public exams and international science Olympiads.

Some 1.2 million eighth graders took the TEOG exam. Students were asked 120 questions on language, mathematics, science and technology, history, foreign languages and ethics. The ministry announced that 67 students took the TEOG exam at their homes, three from hospitals and 6,121 from halls for single students in exceptional health or disability cases.

Anafen Dershaneleri Diyarbakır Director Mustafa Kaya told Today’s Zaman that 52 students who attended prep courses in Anafen in cities in southeast Turkey answered all 120 questions correctly. According to Kaya, 16 students in Diyarbakır, 15 in Şanlıurfa, eight in Batman, four in Adıyaman, three in Mardin, two in Şırnak, two in Muş, one in Bingöl and one in Bitlis scored 100 percent.

Flaws in the education system are largely compensated for by preparatory schools that help students prepare for centralized high school and university exams at affordable prices.

Parliament passed a law earlier in 2014 to close these schools, which led to public anger that the absence of preparatory schools will deal another blow to the already low level of education in the east and southeast and draw young people in the regions into the hands of terrorist organizations. According to the law, introduced by the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government, prep schools will not be allowed to operate from Sept. 1, 2015 onward.

In a big success story in Şanlıurfa province, 12 students from private Çağlayan Okulları answered all 120 questions correctly on the TEOG exam. The total number of students who scored 100 percent in Şanlıurfa is 15. The school’s other 14 students answered 119 questions out of 120 correctly.

Ömer Faruk Ceylan, an eighth-grade student at Mehmet Nezih Erdem Koleji in Midyat, a district of Mardin province in southeast Turkey, scored 100 percent. Ali Onur Koç from the same college answered 119 out of 120 correctly and two other students, Hazalnur Kızılbulut and Murat Erol, correctly answered 117 questions.

Eleven students from private Kahramankent Middle School, another Hizmet-affiliated school, in Kahramanmaraş province correctly answered all 120 questions on the TEOG exam. School Director Alparslan Kömüşçü said planned and systematic preparation for the exam brought success to their students. Kömüşçü added that he expects more students will answer all the questions correctly in the next semester’s TEOG exam.

All seven students from the private Fatih Koleji in Karabük province and Erkul Eğitim Kurumları in Kocaeli province scored the highest possible marks. Five students from Kastamonu’s private Saka College and all four from Edirne’s private Fatih Serhat Koleji, Nigde’s private Sungur Koleji and Amasya’s Private Yavuz Selim Top Koleji were also among the top scorers on the TEOG exam.

The TEOG exam was adopted at the beginning of the 2013-2014 academic year as a new high school admission mechanism, replacing the previous Level Determination Examination (SBS) exam. According to the TEOG system, eighth-graders must take 12 exams in six subjects during the academic year. Students take six tests in the fall and the second half of the full set of exams during the spring semester.

İstanbul’s Fatih Koleji, Ankara’s Samanyolu and Atlantik Okulları and İzmir’s Yamanlar Okulları, which have been put under pressure by the AK Party government, picked up 64 medals out of 120 in November 2014 in the 22nd National Science Olympiad and the 19th National Mathematics Olympiad for primary and secondary schools. The schools’ names were not announced after the winners’ names for the first time at the award distribution ceremony on Nov. 19.

Some private schools, Fatih Koleji, Samanyolu, Atlantik and Yamanlar Okulları among them, which are affiliated with the Hizmet movement, have been targeted by the AK Party and government circles since Dec. 17, 2013, when a massive corruption and bribery scandal implicating AK Party circles became public. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan accuses the Hizmet movement and its sympathizers in the state bureaucracy of being behind the Dec. 17 operations targeting government corruption.

Source: Today's Zaman , January 15, 2015


Related News

Gulen, Erdogan and democracy in Turkey

Previously, most observers had wrongly assumed that these groups were inherent allies because of their faith-based worldview. In sharp contrast to this misperception, these groups came from entirely different pasts and political orientation, although they share a common interest in free market economy and cherished upward socio-economic mobility.

President Gül dismisses calls to help tackle political turmoil

During a press conference held on Monday, the GYV, whose honorary chairman is Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, stated that a hate crime is being carried out against the Hizmet movement in Turkey and called on President Gül to take the initiative to investigate the executive branch’s recent attempts to render the judiciary dysfunctional.

Pro-Erdoğan journalists call for assassination of Gülen followers abroad

Journalists Cem Küçük and Fuat Uğur, who are staunch supporters of Turkey’s autocratic President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, made a call on Thursday for the assassination of the followers of the faith-based Gülen movement who are abroad during a live broadcast on TGRT news channel.

Turks Taught Us How to Invest In Education, says Congolese Minister

Cihan News Agency In his remarks at the opening ceremony of Shafak International Turkish Schools’ new campus sponsored by businesspeople from Adana province of Turkey, Republic of Congo Minister of Education Mr. Maker Mwangu Famba expressed his admiration of high quality education offered at the schools. “They have accomplished what our President points us in […]

Prime Ministry approved Kimse Yok Mu, now accused of ‘terrorism’

The humanitarian aid group Kimse Yok Mu, now accused of being an armed terrorist organization, had been directed by the Prime Ministry’s Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), casting doubt on such claims.

Reflections on a Hizmet-inspired school in Tanzania

Ali Mahmoud: “What I will say to my teachers, my mentors, my school sponsors is; thank you for bringing one of the best student experience in the national curriculum of Tanzania.

Latest News

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

They want my backing for the enrollment in Turkish schools

Georgetown University in Qatar professor authors book on interfaith dialogue, Hizmet Movement

US high school students visit Turkey, give glowing reviews

Main opposition deputy head slams gov’t for targeting Hizmet Movement

Erdoğan government opposes democratic values: detained Turkish journalist

Gulen Institute awards student essay winners in Washington

NPR interviews Stephen Kinzer on graft probe and Fethullah Gulen

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News