Times Colonist

Tests show public schools do well

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Re: “B.C.’s public schools exceed expectatio­ns,” March 11.

I’ve just read John Taylor’s excellent commentary. I was a public-school trustee for nine years, and know from personal experience how skewed the Fraser Institute school rankings are.

When all Grade 12 students wrote tests to graduate, I used the test results to show how well public-school students do compared with private school students. My data were based on seven years, and were not a sample, but an aggregatio­n of the results for all provincial students. The result was eye-opening.

Public-school students scored, on average, three per cent less than private-school students. In other words, if private-school students scored an average of 90 per cent on a socials exam, public-school students scored an average of 87 per cent.

Private schools can pick and choose whom they accept; public schools must accept everyone. Thus, teachers at public schools have less time to devote to those students who might be gifted or need just a little help, yet, in my opinion, they do a marvellous job. And the test results confirm this.

The Fraser Institute rankings are based upon skewed reporting of available data, and are as reliable (statistica­lly speaking) as politicall­y motivated “alternativ­e facts.” Russ Searle Former school trustee Gulf Islands district

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