Guide
GKS Interview: Common Questions and How to Prepare
If you have reached the interview stage of the Global Korea Scholarship, you are already a serious contender. The interview is where reviewers check that the person matches the application.

Not every GKS applicant is interviewed, and the format depends on your track and the year, so treat the official notice as the authority. When an interview does happen, it tends to be short and conversational rather than a quiz. Reviewers are checking that the calm, motivated person in front of them is the same one who wrote the application, and that you have thought seriously about studying in Korea.
- Reaching the interview is a strong signal. Your file already passed a bar. Now they are confirming the fit in person.
- It is conversational, not a test. Most questions come straight from your own application. Know your story cold.
- Format varies by track. The embassy and university tracks can differ, and interviews may be in person or online. Confirm the current format.
- Specific and honest wins. Real reasons, real examples, and a clear plan beat polished but hollow answers.
- Practice out loud, but do not memorize. You want to sound prepared, not scripted.
What reviewers are assessing
Behind the friendly questions, reviewers are weighing a few things:
- Motivation and fit. Do you have a genuine, specific reason for this field, this university, and Korea?
- Clarity of plan. Can you explain what you will study and what you want to do after, without rambling?
- Maturity and adaptability. Will you handle living and studying in a new country?
- Consistency. Do your answers match your statement of purpose and study plan?
Common questions to prepare for
These are typical themes. Prepare your own honest answers rather than memorizing lines.
| Question | What they want to see |
|---|---|
| Tell us about yourself | A short, focused story, not your whole life. Lead with what is relevant. |
| Why Korea? | A specific reason beyond pop culture or general praise. |
| Why this university and program? | Real knowledge of the program, named strengths, labs, or courses. |
| What is your study plan? | A concrete plan that matches what you wrote in your application. |
| What will you do after graduating? | A plausible next step that connects to your goals and to Korea. |
| How will you adapt to life in Korea? | Awareness of the challenges and a calm, realistic attitude. |
| How is your Korean, and your plan to improve it? | Honesty plus a concrete plan, even for English-taught programs. |
How to prepare without sounding scripted
- Re-read your own application. Most questions come from it. Be ready to expand on anything you wrote.
- Write bullet points, not scripts. Know the three or four points you want to land for each common question, then speak naturally.
- Practice out loud with a real listener. Saying answers in your head is not the same as saying them to a person who asks follow-ups.
- Record yourself once. It is uncomfortable and useful. You will catch filler words and answers that run too long.
- Prepare a question to ask them, if invited. A thoughtful question signals genuine interest.
On the day
Dress neatly, join early if it is online and test your connection, and have your application and a few notes nearby. Speak a little slower than feels natural, it reads as calm and confident. If you do not understand a question, it is fine to ask politely for it to be repeated. If you do not know something, say so honestly and pivot to what you do know. Composure is part of what they are assessing.
What to do next
- Make sure your written file is strong first: how to write a statement of purpose and study plan.
- Confirm your track and any interview details in the GKS guide and the official notice.
- If Korean ability comes up, see studying in Korea in English and TOPIK.
- Confirm the current, exact process on the official Study in Korea portal.
