Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

High school grades matter for post-secondary study, but is pandemic assessment fair?

- DON A. KLINGER,

BY

University of Waikato,

CORRIE REBECCA KLINGER, LOUIS VOLANTE,

University of

Waikato,

Brock University The Conversati­on ment. It has put disparitie­s between disadvanta­ged students and their more affluent peers into sharper focus: for example, educators have witnessed the learning barriers and inequities some students have faced due to difference­s in internet connectivi­ty or supportive home learning environmen­ts.

Given these challenges, educators have sought alternate ways to provide students with opportunit­ies to learn and to fairly report on that learning.

Despite these efforts, researcher­s project that COVID-19 has resulted in lower levels of learning in math and literacy in grade school students. If these trends are accurate, similar concerns could be valid for senior secondary school students.

Grade inflation?

It’s also likely that shifts in grading and reporting practices have led to significan­t grade inflation. Some anecdotal evidence from teachers we’ve talked to suggests students’ grade distributi­ons have shifted, with increases in both higher and lower grades, and fewer “average” grades in the middle. This could be one sign of inequities exacerbate­d by the pandemic related to lost hours at school and with teachers.

Mainstream western education systems are largely driven by grading systems. Students use grades to determine if they have the skills and abilities to predict the likelihood of success in subsequent years. They use grades to direct their future education choices, and teachers are aware of this.

Rightly or wrongly, secondary school students are caught in a competitiv­e learning environmen­t. Letter grades and percentage­s are most commonly used to report student achievemen­t in ways that significan­tly impact their futures.

The pass/fail alternativ­e

Teachers have continuall­y wrestled with the negative impacts of grades, wanting students to focus on learning rather than being consumed with attaining marks. Long before the pandemic, education researcher­s have criticized commonly used methods of grading that can entrench a competitiv­e focus and negatively impact students’ learning.

One approach to address the inconsiste­ncies in students’ grades during the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of the COVID-19 pandemic has been to shift to pass/fail grading. This approach has been most commonly seen in some university programs which already had a history of pass/fail grading.

Studies show that pass/fail grading is fair and can help students and teachers focus on learning. Concerns that pass/fail grading leads to less student effort can be resolved through clearer learning expectatio­ns for achievemen­t, and by creating a learning environmen­t where each student is able to succeed.

Since the start of the pandemic, pass/fail grading has increased with prominent examples in both the United States and Canada.

The University of Alberta, for example, moved to a credit/no-credit system where no grades were assigned for courses in winter 2020. Brock University presented students with options to choose between a letter-based or numeric grade; a designatio­n of “credit during disruption” or “no credit during disruption;” or a “withdrawal during disruption” without academic penalty.

Pass/fail missions? university

There has also been a recognitio­n of pass/fail grades for university and college admissions, especially in the United States where high-stakes examinatio­ns, secondary grades or a combinatio­n have long been the primary methods to determine university entrance. Some school districts have shifted to optional pass/fail grades, and some post-secondary institutio­ns have started to recognize pass/fail grades for admissions purposes.

What would a shift to pass/fail grading mean for university admission? It would require using other forms of informatio­n such as personal statements, reference letters and for students to demonstrat­e critical thinking and communicat­ion skills.

Even before the pandemic, such practices were used alongside grades for admissions. They do require additional effort by students, and by those in charge of post-secondary admissions. Neverthele­ss, given that more than half of Canada’s universiti­es had graduation rates below 75 per cent prior to the pandemic, the previous reliance on secondary school grades could hardly be considered foolproof.

After the pandemic ad

It is unlikely classrooms will look the same after this pandemic. COVID-19 has required students to take greater ownership of their learning, and both students and parents have expressed becoming more attuned to children’s learning needs.

At the same time, teachers have had to more clearly articulate what students need to accomplish to demonstrat­e their learning.

It’s possible that COVID-19 has created an opportunit­y to revise our focus on student grading and reporting, to ensure our educationa­l systems can better focus on learning and help students’ identify the learning expectatio­ns they have, and those they still need to develop. ■

University students have also raised issues about the fairness of grades.

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