In a competitive examination-important context, the Bell Curve God constitutes part of the range of coping strategies for stressed students. The informality and sense of humor associated with this “worship” is apparent as students engage in a playful and interactive process of communicating with “God.” For some, all of this is about finding humor through the mimicry of religion, while for others there may be a genuine sense of investing in insurance through prayer. The playfulness apparent in the association with April Fool’s Day is also manifest in the “worship” on social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter, where pages are dedicated to the Bell Curve God. The “truly hopeless” could then be directed to the Bell Curve God to seek forgiveness/blessings, and they could pen their wishes to offer to the Bell Curve God. Among the “religious” elements was the setting up of GPA confession booths, where students could go to confess why their GPA was so low or so high. In one local university, students suggested the theme of “You are your GPA Day” as a “celebration” of April Fool’s Day, and got librarians with a sense of humor to play out the theme at the library. Such expressions suggest a creative imagination among students and offer some amusement for them as they face impending exams. The “offerings” presented to the Bell Curve God include popular snacks such as “Pocky sticks,” which carry a physical resemblance to the joss sticks used in Chinese worship. As much as there is a serious element to the worship of the Bell Curve God, it simultaneously carries humor, as caricature drawings of the “God” create amusement. A certain informality prevails, with pictures that are hand-drawn, and instructions handwritten, with spontaneous, almost makeshift “altars” thrown together. taking sweets from a glass jar, ringing a bell, throwing dice, bowing, reciting words (Figure 2).
A series of “rituals” is also involved in the worship, and a set of instructions accompany the shrine to enact worship-e.g.
Physical shrines may be decorated with items such as food and candles. In one of the local universities, a lion (the university’s mascot) dons the graduation gown (Figure 1). Inevitably, the Bell Curve God is togged in a mortar cap with a graduation gown. More commonly, students visit physical “altars” or “shrines” containing caricature drawings of the Bell Curve God. Some students may carry an imprint of the Bell Curve God in their daily lives, such as placing this as a background photo on personal devices such as mobile phones. Generally, these practices emerge near exam time. The manner of “worship” of the Bell Curve God can take different forms. They pray for “deliverance” and seek reward in the form of grades “sustenance” Students pray for its intervention to not have their grades classified in the lower end of the curve.
The Bell Curve God is characterized as capable of granting “blessings” to those who worship and pray to it. The “Bell Curve God” originates from the bell curve grading system, where the performance of a student in an examination is determined based on his/her performance relative to his or her peers, and grades in a class are expected to be distributed along a curve, which in the most “pristine” is a normal distribution (that is, a bell curve)…. It is in such contexts that the emergence of a “Bell Curve God” in Singapore must be understood.
The means adopted to cope with the stresses that come along with such intensity are myriad. … The importance placed on education and, relatedly, examinations, in many Asian societies is well known. This is an Author’s Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Material Religion, 27 October 2016, Mimicking Religion as Coping Strategy: The Emergence of the Bell-Curve God in Singapore From Material Religion, an academic journal: