Toronto Star

Ontario to resume EQAO testing for grades 3 and 6

Standardiz­ed tests to gauge learning gaps caused by pandemic disruption­s, education minister says

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY

Ontario is going to resume standardiz­ed testing in grades 3 and 6 this school year — and has already restarted province-wide math and literacy tests in high school — to help pinpoint where kids have fallen behind during the pandemic.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce made the announceme­nt Thursday afternoon at a library in Vaughan, along with early notice for boards of funding levels for the coming school year of $26.1 billion — a 2.7 per cent increase — or $13,059 per student.

The pandemic “has led to significan­t disruption at home and abroad for students,” Lecce said. “For many students, it has left them struggling with mental health challenges and with learning loss.”

He said “we know that so many students have gaps in some of the foundation­s of learning … we are now at a point where we believe we need to be able to better understand the problem” by using the standardiz­ed tests to set a baseline for improvemen­t, as well as mental health surveys and other measures.

Both the Ontario Public School Boards’ Associatio­n and the Ontario Catholic School Trustees’ Associatio­n said the funding news gives boards time to plan for the 2022-23 school year.

“We welcome the focus on those students who really struggled with their learning needs,” said public school associatio­n president Cathy Abraham, something both associatio­ns had pressed for.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has been a challengin­g and stressful time for students, staff, and our broader school communitie­s.”

However, critics accused the province of dragging its feet, only proposing to comprehens­ively address learning loss two years into the COVID crisis.

“The funding announceme­nt doesn’t keep up with inflation, so it is not an increase as the government is trying to present it as,” said NDP education critic Marit Stiles. “But where it really fails — it doesn’t actually put in place the significan­t funding and support that our kids are going to need, not just today and tomorrow but over the next few years.

“It’s pretty disappoint­ing,” she added.

“It’s a little bit too little, too late.” She also said the stress of taking EQAO standardiz­ed tests in reading, writing or math in grades 3, 6 and 9 and 10 isn’t going to be good for students and that learning loss “is not going to be captured in a one-time-only test.”

Two years after the pandemic hit, there is still very little Ontario data available on how students have fared, though research in other jurisdicti­ons — where kids spent much less time learning online — has shown up to three months of academic losses. The Toronto District School Board, the country’s largest, found a nine-percentage­point drop in Grade 1 student reading levels for students learning online, and a three-point drop for those learning in-person.

As first reported by the Star, the province is also boosting funding for reading supports for kids who are struggling, as well as $174 million more to boards for tutoring — starting now — and an expanded summer school program.

It is also giving boards $304 million for temporary staffing to help with pandemic needs, de-streaming Grade 9 subjects and remote learning.

A staple during the worst of the waves during the pandemic, fulltime online learning will continue to be an option for students in the upcoming school year.

(Lecce said this school year, 150,000 of the province’s two million students chose to learn from home.)

Mental health and student wellbeing will be supported through a $90-million grant, as well as requiring educators to attend profession­al developmen­t on the issue. The government is also going to consult “on the potential of a graduation requiremen­t on resilience and mental well-being.”

The $175 million for tutoring will be run by boards — using educationa­l assistants, post-secondary students or others — or community groups, and allow students extra help in small groups of about five after school or on weekends.

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Education Minister Stephen Lecce also gave school boards early notice of the funding levels for the coming school year: $26.1 billion — a 2.7 per cent increase, or $13,059 per student.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Education Minister Stephen Lecce also gave school boards early notice of the funding levels for the coming school year: $26.1 billion — a 2.7 per cent increase, or $13,059 per student.

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