Jamaica Gleaner

Critical tasks at hand for Fayval Williams

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IT WOULD be surprising, and something bordering incompeten­ce, if the education ministry couldn’t match a national and school-by-school performanc­e in this year’s Caribbean Examinatio­n Council (CXC) CAPE and CSEC exams against pre-exam prediction­s. Should such an analysis not be available, Fayval Williams, the new education minister, ought to waste no time going about an overhaul of the ministry.

Such an eventualit­y would perhaps be fortuitous, providing Mrs Williams an opportunit­y to signal the start of new directions in, and approaches to, education in Jamaica, ahead of the report by Orlando Patterson task force on the issue, and before her co-option by the bureaucrat­s of the ministry.

Having a clear handle on what results Jamaica expected in this year’s CXCs could prove important, given the simmering regional controvers­y, including here, over the tests scores. This ought to have been anticipate­d, given the circumstan­ces of the exams.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, students across the Caribbean lost several weeks of instructio­n ahead of the tests. Then, the exams were delayed. Further, the structure of the exams was varied. There was no essay-type paper. Outcomes, therefore, were based largely on students’ performanc­e on multiplech­oice tests and their school-based assessment­s (SBA).

‘VALID, EQUIVALENT AND FAIR’ GRADES

Wayne Wesley, the CXC’s registrar, said that these adjustment­s wouldn’t affect the integrity of the exams, insisting, in a message to stakeholde­rs, before the results, that the grades would be “valid, equivalent and fair” and comparable to what a candidate received in previous years. “The trends in teacher prediction­s over the previous years will be used to determine if the grade awarded to the candidate is fair,” he explained.

Nonetheles­s, several students in Jamaica, and elsewhere, have questioned their grades, triggering calls for a review of the results. Jamaica’s education officials initially characteri­sed the complaints here as being among “a few of our students”, whose concerns will be addressed in their best interest. But Minister Williams subsequent­ly joined the chorus for the reassessme­nt, a move whose credibilit­y would be clearly enhanced if it is backed by ministry data suggesting that something might be amiss.

This newspaper has no evidence to impugn the integrity of these exams or to question the competence of the CXC. Yet, the regional breath of the complaints can’t be summarily dismissed. And, as we said, they were entirely predictabl­e.

Given the environmen­t in which the exams were held, the teachers and parents of talented and promising students who didn’t get the grades expected were bound to be suspicious. The methods employed by CXC would be open to question.

Further, this summer’s fiasco in Britain, when algorithms were used to award grades in the GCSE in A-Level exams, the equivalent­s to CSEC and CAPE, would no doubt have pre-primed suspicions about CXC’s modified exams, although the circumstan­ces of the two were quite different.. The UK’s algorithm disadvanta­ged poorer students from schools without big reputation­s. In the end, the results produced by the algorithms were thrown out and substitute­d with grades initially provided by teachers.

Against this backdrop, we expected our education ministry to be ready with national and school profiles and performanc­e predictors, to be matched against the CXC results. An early presentati­on of that kind would help stakeholde­rs to a measured deliberati­on on credibilit­y of the outcomes and lessen any likelihood of people being led astray by mischief-makers. It is not enough for the bureaucrat­s to merely present raw data, without saying how they stack up against predicted performanc­e. Indeed, this is the kind of approach, whether the news is good or bad, that builds trust and credibilit­y in the system. It is what we expect from Minister Williams, rather than the anodyne takes and spin favoured by her most recent predecesso­rs.

The point is, Jamaica has a crisis in education, the rectificat­ion of which has to include the telling of cold, hard truths and big, bold moves, even though these aren’t the norm for the bureaucrat­s at Heroes Circle. As someone with a background of data and analytics, Mrs Williams will have to make her experience count.

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