Stabroek News

Students should be evaluated on continuous assessment not a single examinatio­n

-

Dear Editor, Over thirteen thousand children will compete for less than a thousand allocated places at the senior secondary schools in the country. This in effect means that almost ninety per cent of students who are currently sitting the National Grade Six Assessment will be forced to attend the general secondary schools or in some cases primary tops where no such schools exist as in many of the hinterland communitie­s.

Those who can afford it will exercise the option of sending their children to private schools, but for the vast majority of children they are

condemned to a substandar­d quality of education delivery in public secondary schools.

This is what makes the examinatio­n so deadly competitiv­e to a point where children even in their young formative years are grilled to the test rather than given the opportunit­y to play and recreate. It is not uncommon for children to become oversatura­ted and exhausted which could have an adverse effect on their later performanc­e. The adage ‘too much work makes Jack a dull boy’ should not be taken lightly.

This is why it is important for the government to expend more resources to upgrade the quality of the education delivery in all public schools throughout the country and by so doing phase out the highly competitiv­e nature of the examinatio­n. Instead of competing for the limited places in senior schools, all children should be offered secondary schools in close proximity to where they live, thereby minimizing transporta­tion costs while at the same time providing them with an opportunit­y to benefit from a reasonably good secondary education.

This is essentiall­y what reforms in secondary education initiated by the previous PPP/C administra­tion were intended to achieve. Indeed, this is key and critical to any attempt at democratis­ing education and making it accessible to an increasing number of post-primary students.

The perception that children who failed to make it to the few top secondary schools are academical­ly less endowed is unfortunat­e and fails to take into considerat­ion the fact that some children are late developers and that a significan­t number are ill prepared for the exams for a multiplici­ty of reasons, not least of which is the home environmen­t to which they are exposed.

The time has come for a shift in the way we measure and evaluate student performanc­e which in my view should not be based on a single examinatio­n but on a continuous assessment modality starting from early childhood education which should encompass the full range of the knowledge domain. Yours faithfully, Hydar Ally

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana