Stabroek News

CSEC exams underway

-Manickchan­d says students not less prepared than in previous years

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As fifth form students writing the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e (CSEC) turned out for the start of their exams yesterday, Minister of Education Priya Manickchan­d said that she believes the students are not any less prepared than their predecesso­rs.

In a video released by the Ministry of Education, Manickchan­d was seen visiting Georgetown Schools and wishing the students well for their first examinatio­n.

She also said that she doesn’t think they were “any less prepared, academical­ly, than any other year because of some of the decisions we took”. She explained, “I expect our children to do very well. We are one of the countries that took some bold decisions last year and brought our children back out but not because we wanted to and not by ourselves. We listened to what teachers, students and parents said they needed; that is, face-to-face sessions”.

The minister added that the psychologi­cal effects of the pandemic have to be considered but added that she is sure that the students will do well. She also said that the students need to do well because the country is thriving and “there will be many opportunit­ies for young people to further their studies to get exciting jobs to do things that would be meaningful in the developmen­t of the country.”

The Caribbean Examinatio­ns Council (CXC)-administer­ed CSEC and Caribbean Advanced Proficienc­y Examinatio­n (CAPE) were deferred in May to accommodat­e students’ request for more time due to the disruption­s caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the volcanic eruptions in St Vincent and the Grenadines. The exams, which were supposed to start on June 14 and continue until July 16, were instead set for a June 28 start, with results expected to be available in the last week of September, 2021 or the first week in October, 2021.

CXC Registrar Dr. Wayne Wesley had made the announceme­nt of the revised strategy for the 2021 regional examinatio­ns. The exams are being administer­ed in their original format, consisting of Papers 1 and 2. Paper 3/1, which is the School Based Assessment (SBA), and Paper 3/2 for private candidates will also be included.

In 2020, the council made a change to the exam style by only having candidates sit Paper 1 and submit their SBAs but there was a regional outburst when the results were announced. The grade point average had dropped significan­tly for many countries and other discrepanc­ies were found. Manickchan­d had reached out to the regional examinatio­n body, resulting in the results being reviewed for many schools that had subjects marked as ungraded for the entire level.

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