Daily Observer (Jamaica)

CXC FACES MORE FLAK OVER POOR 2020 CSEC, CAPE GRADES

- BY ALPHEA SAUNDERS

THERE is renewed pressure on the Caribbean Examinatio­n Council (CXC) to rectify the poor grades which it awarded to thousands of students who sat the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e (CSEC) and Caribbean Advanced Proficienc­y Examinatio­n (CAPE) exams this year, particular­ly those at schools with a history of high performanc­e.

Principals, students, parents and other stakeholde­rs have increased their clamour for redress, notwithsta­nding CXC’S explanatio­ns for the distributi­on of grades, which the independen­t team that reviewed the process, found were “slightly skewed”.

The call for greater transparen­cy and for the grading mechanism to be made public, comes as negotiatio­ns begin for the 2021 sitting of CSEC and CAPE.

The Caribbean Coalition for CXC Exam 2020 Redress said yesterday that it will not relent until CXC resolves the grades.

The coalition is especially concerned about the scores received by students who have a history of exceptiona­l performanc­e and are insistent that CXC must fix what it believes are gross errors that go against the testing standards of fairness, reliabilit­y, and consistenc­y.

At a virtual regional press conference yesterday, the coalition scrutinise­d the findings of the independen­t review team, refuting the idea that there was fault on the part of administra­tors, students, or incompeten­ce by teachers with decades of experience.

Khaleel Kothdiwala, a CAPE student of Queens College in Barbados described the situation as “nothing short of a tragedy”, as he outlined the severe impact of the grades on students, some of whom he said are now stuck in academic limbo.

Principal of Jamaica’s Campion College Grace Baston said the school was “baffled as to the inexplicab­le decline in the quality of our passes this year”, with grades for some areas that were “absolutely unheard of” and “unknown to us”.

She outlined the dramatic decline in grade one passes for CSEC at the institutio­n, renowned for its academic excellence and being one of Jamaica’s top-performing schools in both CXC and CAPE over the years. Campion also consistent­ly has the most students on the CXC’S regional merit list for CSEC and CAPE.

Baston stressed the wide gaps between the predicted scores of teachers and actual test scores, pointing out that teachers are usually on point, or modest with their predicted scores. She said School-based Assessment (SBA) scores for the sciences, for example, were moderated on site by agents of CXC, who confirmed teachers’ scores.

She also highlighte­d decreases from predicted grade ones for students who are known high performers, downward to as far as grade seven.

The principal pointed to the report of the independen­t review team which admitted that there was “slight skewness” in the distributi­on of scores, yet critical informatio­n on how “cut points” were establishe­d, were not made available.

She noted also the acknowledg­ement that the use of the statistica­l procedure for the

grading process could have resulted in some degree of misclassif­ication of profile scores/ grades.

“That is deeply concerning to me. So how did we proceed with it? What did we do to mitigate that?” she questioned.

The review team also said the adjusted model which CXC used this year produced some degree of inter-grade shifting in the distributi­on of scores for some subjects, and that at the technical level the limitation­s of the grading model resulted in less than expected performanc­e in some subjects for both CSEC and CAPE.

She emphasised that the anomalies do not apply generally to secondary schools across Jamaica, with most schools reporting welcome improvemen­t in performanc­e. However, she said, “The underperfo­rmance of some of the country’s strongest students leads us to wonder if there was some form of unintentio­nal grade compressio­n, which had adversely affected some high-performing students.”

She said CXC must, therefore, make public the process by which grades were assigned in 2020, and that if it is evident that certain students were put at a disadvanta­ge, the council should immediatel­y rectify the situation.

Other principals from top-performing high schools in countries such as Belize and Barbados, also lamented dismal scores, including no grades, awarded to top students.

Educationa­l consultant Dr Michael Clarke said, having reviewed the data, his assessment was that the testing standard of fairness, validity, and reliabilit­y had not been met. He pointed to the report from the independen­t review, which indicated that the results were neither reliable nor valid.

Dr Clarke argued that the exclusion of paper two from the CSEC exams, which would require students to demonstrat­e knowledge of the subject area and improve their overall scores, had had a deleteriou­s effect on those who would have otherwise done well.

He asserted: “When the potential for grade compressio­n by eliminatio­n of paper two is compounded by a change protocol that results in students earning lower grades in one of the two remaining papers that are used for determinat­ion of grade awards, I cannot accept that this process was fair.”

The reasonable redress, he suggested, would be to regrade paper three in a manner consistent with the historic grading to recapture what reliabilit­y of scores there might be. “This will not address all ills, but it is something that is doable,” he remarked, noting also that an additional option would be to offer students the opportunit­y to sit paper two.

In a statement on behalf of the coalition, head of Jamaica Associatio­n of Principals of Secondary Schools, Linvern Wright, said there was no intent to damage or hurt the reputation of CXC.

However, he said that in fairness to the affected students and for the sake of transparen­cy, the coalition believed CXC needed to give a much better account for the inexplicab­le fall in the quality of performanc­e of many of the region’s outstandin­g students by releasing, in its entirety, the mechanism used to compute the grades.

“CXC needs to make known cut off scores for 2020 in relation to other years so that stakeholde­rs may understand better how it made allowances to ensure that this year’s marking did not disadvanta­ge students already disadvanta­ged by the onset of a devastatin­g pandemic,” said Wright. He noted that not even the review team had access to this data.

The coalition also criticised CXC’S delayed and piecemeal approach, despite the apprehensi­on among students and administra­tors. Wright said this type of approach is frustratin­g and that grade reviews need to be communicat­ed to schools clearly and quickly. “The review process, we feel, is punishingl­y protracted and needs to be handled with greater sensitivit­y to the plight of students awaiting such reviews,” he stated.

The coalition also wants CXC to explain why for subjects like the sciences where the multiple-choice marks are better and SBA’S moderated and signed off as outstandin­g by moderators, the quality of those grades declined below expectatio­ns.

He said, too, that CXC needed to account for poor performanc­es, without suggesting that students did poorly on multiple choice examinatio­ns because they swatted. “It cannot be acceptable that most students did better but among the top-performing students the performanc­es were poor in quality. Such anomalies in performanc­e need to be much better explained,” Wright argued.

In October, CXC defended the integrity of this year’s modified approach to the regional exams, and the competence of the council. It blamed the grades, which have forced thousands of candidates to ask for a review, on deficienci­es in the overall system.

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 ?? (Photo: Naphtali Junior) ?? Sherika Powell-easy, English teacher of
St. Jago High School in St Catherine, distribute­s CSEC and CAPE past papers as students revised lessons for the 2020 examinatio­ns.
(Photo: Naphtali Junior) Sherika Powell-easy, English teacher of St. Jago High School in St Catherine, distribute­s CSEC and CAPE past papers as students revised lessons for the 2020 examinatio­ns.
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