The New Zealand Herald

NZQA faces Kaye ‘please explain’ over plagiarise­d exam

- Simon Collins

Education Minister Nikki Kaye has issued a “please explain” to the NZ Qualificat­ions Authority after it posted a plagiarise­d exam paper on its website as an “exemplar”.

The authority, which did not spot mistakes in three maths exams last year, has posted almost identical papers on the 1981 Springbok tour as textbook cases of scripts that earned “excellence” grades in the 2011 and 2012 history exams.

A history teacher at a South Auckland school whose students spotted the almost word-for-word similarity between the two papers said the 2012 script was “clearly plagiarise­d” from the previous year’s example.

But History Teachers Associatio­n treasurer Greg Burnard said memorising previous years’ answers was “reasonably widespread across the country”.

“Memorising an exemplar is not going to be punished, essentiall­y.

“It’s not seen as cheating, it’s just seen as being well prepared.”

Kaye said she would ask NZQA chairwoman Sue Suckling to explain, and was considerin­g an external review of the authority’s processes.

“I have asked the NZQA chair to meet with me in the next two days so that I can have confidence in the process they will be undertakin­g to ensure adequate quality assurance and that plagiarism is not occurring,” Kaye said.

“I will also be discussing with the Ministry of Education whether additional work needs to occur independen­tly to look at NZQA’s quality assurance or whether their own review is sufficient.

“I am aware that in the maths review NZQA commission­ed an independen­t panel to review the matters.”

Labour education spokesman Chris Hipkins said NZQA “do seem to have some quality control issues when it comes to exams”.

“We seem to be hearing about more of these cases and that’s something NZQA definitely needs to answer for,” he said.

Burnard, who is head of history at Whangapara­oa College, said memorising exemplars had become widespread since the curriculum was changed from prescribin­g content, such as specific historical events, to a “generic” system allowing each teacher to choose which topics to teach.

The change means the questions in external exams for the National Certificat­e of Educationa­l Achievemen­t (NCEA) have also become generic.

The unit for which the two nearidenti­cal answers were chosen as exemplars in successive years is Level 1 NCEA History unit 91006 called, “Describe how a significan­t historical event affected NZ society”.

The wording of the first question in every exam since at least 2011 has been, “Describe what happened in your chosen historical event.”

The wording of the other two questions in the exam has changed slightly, but in every year the second question asked for more detail about elements of the historical event which the student could choose, and the third question asked about the significan­ce of the event.

“There are minor tweaks with the question year by year, but essentiall­y the question is pretty predictabl­e, so it is open to abuse in that regard,” Burnard said.

“What has happened with generic exams is the answers have become longer and longer. It’s become more and more predictabl­e, so kids really prepare very thoroughly.” NZQA said in a statement that publicatio­n of the plagiarise­d 2012 history paper as an exemplar was “unacceptab­le” and the authority “regrets that this occurred”.

“We have removed the two exemplars from our website and we will check all our examinatio­n exemplars,” it said. “Although the two Level 1 history papers are historical and date back to 2011 and 2012, we will be reviewing our current systems and processes to ensure this cannot happen again.

“Given the historical nature of this particular incident, it is very unlikely that we would be able to identify the student whose 2012 examinatio­n paper was used as an exemplar.”

 ??  ?? A student’s exam answer used as an example of excellence has been exposed as a close copy of a previous answer.
A student’s exam answer used as an example of excellence has been exposed as a close copy of a previous answer.
 ??  ?? Nikki Kaye
Nikki Kaye

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