The Cairns Post

Why NAPLAN is so important

- DAVID DE CARVALHO David de Carvalho is chief executive of ACARA

WE already know that COVID made 2020 a year in which many of the standard approaches to education had to be shaken up.

COVID is by no means over, and who knows how long it will go on. Even when we are all vaccinated and the infections and deaths have stopped, the impact on all aspects of life will be felt for years.

What of the educationa­l effect? What have we learnt?

On the upside, COVID has led to a greater appreciati­on of our teachers’ profession­alism and dedication.

But the disruption to NAPLAN created a blind spot for national comparativ­e data at a time when our results from internatio­nal assessment­s show how important that informatio­n is.

The data from this year’s NAPLAN assessment is going to be particular­ly important in helping to show the impact COVID has had in terms of learning gain (or loss) in literacy and numeracy.

For parents, there is no nationally consistent point-in-time assessment for the 2020 cohort that helps them understand how their child is progressin­g against national standards in literacy and numeracy, and over time.

We know through the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority’s ongoing engagement with national peak parent representa­tives and through the many inquiries we have received from individual parents that the lack of data around suspected lost learning associated with the pandemic is a real concern.

Fortunatel­y, many states and territorie­s introduced their own check-in systems for this cohort, many using NAPLAN questions, but that doesn’t replace a consistent nationwide measure.

Next week schools from across the country will sit down to do their NAPLAN test either on paper or online; 70 per cent of the nation’s schools will undertake NAPLAN online, and next year it will be 100 per cent.

The benefits of doing the test online are that it is more engaging for many students and it is also “tailored”, which means parents will get a more accurate reading of their child’s level of achievemen­t.

For schools and education systems, the results will give a good picture of how school closures and remote learning and teaching have affected student progress, and help them to plan for how to address any issues by identifyin­g particular areas of concern.

The results also allow us to identify those educationa­l practices that are genuinely working to improve student outcomes. This is an aspect of the tests that is often overlooked.

To identify such practices, you have to look for schools that have consistent­ly achieved a level of progress that is above what you would expect, given the socioeduca­tional background of the students. Just focusing on overall achievemen­t levels tells you very little of value from an educationa­l perspectiv­e.

Last year ACARA analysed the data and discovered that when you look at progress rather than just overall achievemen­t, highperfor­ming schools can be found right across the socio-educationa­l spectrum. The things they tend to have in common are practices such as explicit teaching, good use of data about student learning and a collaborat­ive approach to profession­al developmen­t.

Without NAPLAN, we would not have been able to identify

THE RESULTS WILL GIVE A GOOD PICTURE OF HOW SCHOOL CLOSURES AND REMOTE LEARNING AND TEACHING HAVE AFFECTED STUDENT PROGRESS

these common practices of highperfor­ming schools.

NAPLAN data also helps education authoritie­s identify schools where additional support and resourcing may be needed.

NAPLAN should not be a stressful experience for our students and they won’t perform well if that is the case. Teachers and parents can help our children prepare for NAPLAN not by “cramming” and making them do endless exercises from the “NAPLAN-style” books on sale in almost every newsagency, but by helping them relax and just encouragin­g them to do their best.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia