The Telegram (St. John's)

Lessons to learn from the defunct no-zero policy

-

The longstandi­ng no-zero policy in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador schools is no more. The CEO of the English School District recently announced that teachers are once again free to deduct marks for late work and assign marks of zero when work doesn’t come in at all.

This is a significan­t step forward, not only because no-zero policies have proven to be ineffectiv­e, but because the English School District has long refused to acknowledg­e that it had one in place. As recently as 2015, the previous CEO, Darrin Pike, told the media that the English School District did not have a no-zero policy. Teachers knew better, of course. That is the reason Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Teachers’ Associatio­n never relented in its demand to revoke this misguided policy.

No-zero policies are the brainchild of assessment gurus such as Ken O’connor and Damian Cooper, who claim that report cards should rigidly separate student behaviour from their academic achievemen­t. Because handing work in late, cheating on assignment­s or not submitting an assignment are behaviours, these actions should not have an impact on a student’s final mark in the course. Instead, teachers were expected to deal with these behavioura­l issues and assign students’ marks only on the work that comes in.

Now this might make sense in theory, but anyone who teaches in a real classroom with real students knows that it almost never works. The moment students find out that they can hand in their work anytime or not hand it in at all with no penalty, teacher deadlines become meaningles­s.

Of course, nowhere in the real world do things operate in such a ridiculous manner. Employ- ees are required to complete all of their tasks, not just the ones they like to do. Not only does failure to complete work lead to a loss in pay, employees who act this way quickly find themselves unemployed.

Now that the no-zero policy has finally been repealed, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador educators should consider what lessons can be learned from this debacle.

The first is that bad education policies have incredible staying power. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador teachers have laboured under the absurd nozero policy for half a decade. It took years of lobbying from teachers and parents to get the English School District to see the light on this issue.

Second, the battle against a misguided policy needs to be waged on two fronts. On one hand, it is important to provide solid reasons why a policy is mistaken. But the other front is in getting a school district to acknowledg­e that a particular policy even exists. Even though the no-zero policy was as plain as day to teachers, successive CEOS continuall­y denied that the policy existed, which made it difficult to mobilize pressure on the school district.

A third lesson is that evidence alone will not result in a policy change. Even when research studies exposed as a house of cards the claims made by assessment gurus, supporters of the no-zero approach remained unfazed. The nozero policy is finally gone from Newfoundla­nd and Labrador because teachers, parents, journalist­s, and politician­s read the research evidence and spoke out, forcing the school district to make the right decision.

Finally, no-zero policies are merely the tip of the iceberg when it comes to misguided educationa­l policies. From rigid inclusion to project-based discovery learning to differenti­ated instructio­n, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador teachers are bombarded with bad ideas. Instead of trusting the profession­al judgment of teachers who read and understand the research literature, school and divisional administra­tors force teachers to adopt the latest fads.

Getting rid of the no-zero policy was a step in the right direction. However, this is no time for teachers and parents to be complacent. There are a whole lot of other misguided educationa­l policies that need to be axed. Let’s hope the pressure continues and meaningful change happens.

Michael Zwaagstra, research fellow

Atlantic Institute for Market Studies,

High school teacher and co-author of “What’s Wrong With Our Schools and How We Can Fix Them”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada