The New Zealand Herald

Review of NCEA a rare chance to test the test

If a student comes to a teacher to show them an app they’ve developed in their free time, isn’t that evidence of learning?

- Camilla Highfield is the director of Team Solutions, the profession­al developmen­t provider of University of Auckland’s faculty of education and social work.

With educationa­l organisati­ons all over New Zealand making submission­s on the review of NCEA, we have a rare opportunit­y to look deeply at our education system and ask what we’re really trying to achieve when we assess student work, and if what we are teaching them is even worth assessing.

New Zealand and internatio­nal evidence shows that in testing-intensive jurisdicti­ons there’s a real danger of making the test the point of the learning.

This can create a pernicious idea that learning is something that only happens with a teacher while you’re sitting at a desk in a classroom, and the only type of assessment that has validity are examinatio­ns testing students’ ability to memorise content.

There are plenty of examples of exceptiona­l teaching and learning happening in our schools but many students are also engaging with interestin­g material in creative and futurefocu­sed ways. What we need is a qualificat­ion system that rewards and acknowledg­es the range of knowledge and competenci­es of our young people so they all gain a solid foundation on which to build their lives.

A continued focus on the traditiona­l 20th century approaches will result in a system that doesn’t allow time and recognitio­n for learning that happens across curriculum­s and outside the classroom. We’re educating human beings; the goal should be to support our young people to become well-rounded people who work diligently to create lives they can enjoy, who are curious about the world, and who are engaged with their communitie­s.

That’s not to say we don’t need ways of measuring student performanc­e against standards and criteria. We need a system that clearly outlines the key skills required for success. But we need to make sure that’s what we’re actually testing for, because right now the overwhelmi­ng focus on test scores and obtaining credits is driven by the desire to create robust entry criteria for tertiary courses.

So, what would I like NCEA to look like? I’d like to continue the flexibilit­y the current qualificat­ion allows but broaden the types of learning it recognises and what counts as evidence of learning.

The current assessment methodolog­y relies heavily on teacher knowledge and examinatio­ns to assess a narrow set of skills that are increasing­ly becoming redundant. If a student comes to a teacher to show them an app they’ve developed in their free time, isn’t that evidence of learning? And if it is, then shouldn’t our system recognise it?

There are definitely fundamenta­l critical skills and knowledge that NCEA standards assess which must be retained. We know critical literacy and numeracy skills are important for leading a successful life, students need teaching that helps them develop these skills and not structures that allow avoidance. Students need to understand the nonnegotia­bles required to gain their qualificat­ion as well as having opportunit­ies to develop and be rewarded for their passions and interests.

We certainly require a system that allows students from all ethnicitie­s and background­s to aim to be doctors, engineers, computer coders and scientists, which are vital roles in society, but we also know many of our students want to engage in trades and creative industries and require a platform from which to build their future in ways that haven’t been fully explored yet.

New Zealand will be a better place for producing a generation of young people who feel that they have a formal qualificat­ion that recognises all aspects of their knowledge and competenci­es.

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