Penticton Herald

Stop fighting education assessment­s

- By PETER COWLEY Peter Cowley is a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute.

In a few weeks, Grade 4 and Grade 7 students across B.C. will write the foundation skills assessment­s (FSAs), which test student literacy and numeracy skills.

This will be the 23rd annual writing of the FSAs. Each year the assessment­s provide evidence of the extent to which elementary and middle school students are achieving acceptable levels of these two critical skills. Regrettabl­y, even before its introducti­on in 2000, the teachers’ union began its action to have the FSAs eliminated. The FSAs are standardiz­ed tests. This means that all students in the province write the same tests and, therefore, the results enable useful comparison­s.

Parents can see how their own children are doing relative to expectatio­ns and how their school compares in its results to other nearby schools.

School principals and teachers can see whether the school’s results are improving, unchanging, or declining over time. By comparing their school’s results with those of other schools that serve students with similar characteri­stics, principals may find ways to improve their own school’s results.

Likewise, public and independen­t school boards compare their results to those of other boards and share informatio­n about what works and what does not.

Finally, the Ministry of Education combs the FSA results to find opportunit­ies to improve the curriculum.

Indeed, at every level the results of the FSAs are used to improve the education of all students.

Nonetheles­s, the teachers’ union has summarily dismissed the FSA assessment­s as being of no value.

It has continuous­ly lobbied government­s to drop the assessment. Fortunatel­y, without success.

When it was clear that lobbying alone would not work, the union continues a campaign to convince parents to have their children excused from the test.

The union’s campaign is based on a jumble of lies. In its messages to parents the union argues that the FSA is a waste of money, that the results are useless, and they put unnecessar­y stress on students. The union has, of course, never offered tangible evidence for any of these claims.

In fact, the FSA assessment­s take less than four hours, and they are administer­ed gently over a fourweek period. Students do not have to study for the FSAs and these assessment­s don’t count for any school marks. Clearly, the FSAs are inexpensiv­e given their value.

The union’s most egregious lie – found in many of the B.C. Teachers’ Federation campaign materials – that parents may have their students excused from the testing simply by letting the principal know that their child will not be participat­ing.

On this matter, the ministry informatio­n to parents is clear.

“All Grade 4 and 7 students in B.C. are required to complete the FSA in their own classrooms, under the supervisio­n of their classroom teacher or school administra­tor. Your school principal may excuse your child from writing the FSA if they are not yet proficient in English, if they have an identified cognitive disability, or in the event of extenuatin­g circumstan­ces (e.g. illness or family emergency etc.).”

But the union just battles on, offering parents a little pre-printed note which the BCTF encourages parents to sign and deliver to the principal, with no need to include any reason for the exemption.

Recent data shows that about 70 per cent of the public-school students expected to write the FSAs will do so.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada