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In April, the General Secretary of the Guyana Teachers’ Union, Coretta McDonald, told Stabroek News that the Union does not agree with the exam strategy that the Caribbean Examinatio­ns Council (CXC) was proposing.

Saying the alternativ­e proposed would not be credible, McDonald suggested that the exams be postponed, stating that “The rescheduli­ng of the exam should not affect the preparedne­ss of the students given that the syllabus would have already started before the COVID-19 outbreak. But that would give them more time to prepare, for those who feel as though they are not quite ready.” Former Education Minister under the PPP/C administra­tion Priya Manickchan­d also agreed that the exams should be postponed. Many students and teachers also agreed that in order for candidates to fully prepare for the exam and not risk contractin­g the novel coronaviru­s disease, the sittings for the exams should be delayed.

NGSA

Decisions on the National Grade Six Assessment are also to be released to the public. In March, the Ministry of Education released a statement informing parents, teachers and students of the exam’s postponeme­nt. “The Ministry of Education wishes to notify the general public that due to the current situation, careful thought has been given to the scheduled dates for the administra­tion of the National Grade Six Assessment (NGSA) 2020. As such, please be advised that the previously announced dates (April 8 and 9, 2020) are no longer valid. Adequate notice will be given with regard to the new dates,” the release said.

The Ministry has since tried to take advantage of online schooling by contacting parents and using social media apps to send school work for students who are at home. Programmes for classes from grades 1 to 6 are also being broadcast on the Guyana Learning Channel and NCN Radio for students who might not have immediate access to the internet, if any at all. Workbooks are also supposed to be distribute­d to students in rural areas and copies of past papers are being published in newspapers but the public still awaits word about what is to be expected for students and when they will be sitting their exams.

In a letter titled “Children not ready for Grade Six Assessment,” published in the May 17, 2020, edition of Sunday Stabroek, a parent expressed concern about what decisions will be made for students who will have to sit the exams. The parent started off by addressing the much opposed CXC decision and voiced their hope the Ministry will not follow in the CXC’s footsteps. The parent advocated that the ministry “act on the advice of the National COVID-19 Task Force,” given the implicatio­ns that “premature reopening of schools and more so administra­tion of the NGSA may have”.

The parent then noted that while some persons believe that students completed the curriculum before the schools were closed over two months ago, “as a parent of a grade six child, I can tell the policymake­rs that the children are not ready for the examinatio­ns. In my opinion, they must go through at least a month of pupil-teacher contact or re-acclimatiz­ation before they are back in examinatio­n mode. The longer school stays closed, the farther these 10 and 11 year olds are away from examinatio­n readiness. Remember, as much as they would have been ‘home schooled’, three months or more of home schooling cannot get them ready to sit this very important examinatio­n”.

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