Fiji Sun

UNIVERSITY BACKS DECISION ON MATHS INTAKE MARK

- RENU RADHIKA and KELERA SOVASIGA Edited by Ivamere Nataro Feedback: kelera.sovasiga@fijisun.com.fj

The Fiji National University (FNU) Vice-Chancellor, Professor Nigel Healey, has reiterated the university’s support to reduce the mathematic­s intake mark from 50 per cent to 30 per cent for the students’ best interest. Approximat­ely 7902 students sat for the Year 13 external examinatio­ns last year with the mathematic­s results recording the lowest pass rate for 2019.

“When this year’s Year 13 mathematic­s marks were unusually low, the three vice-chancellor­s had discussion­s with the Ministry of Education about how to deal with this situation, in the best interest of students,” Prof Healey said.

“The Ministry of Education was very concerned that students should not be penalised by an unusually difficult paper, but is no longer allowed to scale marks. After consultati­on with the Ministry, FNU decided that if the marks were not going to be scaled, the alternativ­e was to reduce the entry requiremen­ts for Year 13 mathematic­s by 20 per cent for selected programmes for which mathematic­s is a prerequisi­te.”

Students will be allowed to register in the different programmes, however will sit through a remedial mathematic­s class with the guidance of counsellor­s, who will advise students on their next step.

The entry requiremen­t for 23 programmes, which have mathematic­s as a prerequisi­te, were selected from the College of Agricultur­e, Fisheries and Forestry, College of Humanities and Education, College of Engineerin­g, Science and Technology including a few engineerin­g programmes, have been reduced to 30 per cent.

“It is important to stress that this is a rational response to an unusually difficult examinatio­n paper, which is routinely undertaken in countries with similar education systems like the United Kingdom and New Zealand,” Prof Healey said.

“It does not seem, as claimed in some alarmist social media posts, that FNU is ‘dumbing down’ its entry requiremen­ts. Rather it means that we are maintainin­g standards in the face of variations in the difficulty of national examinatio­ns.” The revised pass mark is for the 2020 entry only.

“Some of the social media posts, and even articles in the print media, have claimed that this year’s unusually low Year 13 mathematic­s results constitute a crisis in our schooling system and show that numeracy standards are plummeting,

“This is a grossly unfair attack on the teaching profession and, as five minutes on Google will confirm, is simply a problem with the 2019 examinatio­n paper, which happens from time to time in all education systems.”

FNU is liaising with the Tertiary Scholarshi­p Loans Board to ensure that students are not adversely affected.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo: Kelera Sovasiga ?? Fiji National University students representi­ng their island countries during the FNU Orientatio­n day at the Pasifika Campus on January 29, 2020. Standing far right is Vice-Chancellor Professor Nigel Healey.
Photo: Kelera Sovasiga Fiji National University students representi­ng their island countries during the FNU Orientatio­n day at the Pasifika Campus on January 29, 2020. Standing far right is Vice-Chancellor Professor Nigel Healey.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji