Nothing Left to Lose: The Digital Exile and Defiance of Iran’s Students

NCRI Women's Committee

NCRI Women's Committee
Nothing Left to Lose: The Digital Exile and Defiance of Iran’s Students
Jun 07, 2026 Season 5 Episode 18
NCRI Women's Committee

So welcome to today's deep dive where we're inviting you to explore this with us. Our mission today is to unpack these source reports from June 2026, which detail a massive Gen Z uprising across more than 20 Iranian cities. 

It's incredible. We're looking at how a seemingly bureaucratic change to a university entrance exam, the Konkur, just sparked this nationwide movement demanding fundamental justice. 

Okay. Let's unpack this.

The reports say thousands of students are protesting a policy that mandates high school GPAs be a decisive factor in this exam. And, well, factoring in high school grades sounds entirely normal to me.

Right. Most universities worldwide look at your GPA. 

Exactly. So why is this specific change sparking, like, actual riots in Iran? 

Well, what's fascinating here is that it comes down to the mechanics of how grades are actually awarded there. I mean standardized tests, for all their flaws, are at least a uniform metric. 

Right? Yeah. Everyone takes the same test. 

Exactly.

But high school grades in Iran, according to the sources, are highly subjective and completely tied to your resources. So a student in an underfunded rural school might be graded, really harshly. 

Oh, I see where this is going. 

Yeah. Whereas a wealthy student in an urban center can easily, you know, buy inflated grades through expensive private tutors and well connected private schools.

Right. So imposing this GPA mandate is like making everyone run a marathon, but some runners get a paved road while others are forced through a muddy obstacle course. 

Yes. 

Yet everyone is judged by the exact same stopwatch. 

That's a perfect analogy.

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