Daily Observer (Jamaica)

CXC 2020 results: 18 + 52 = 4

- BY Verona antoine-smith

ON September 22, 2020 the Caribbean Examinatio­ns Council (CXC ) released the 2020 Caribbean Advanced Proficienc­y Examinatio­ns (CAPE) and Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e (CSEC) results. Of note, two informatio­n technology CAPE grades were compared. Student A received a grade one with a profile of C-D-C for (theory, productivi­ty tools and programmin­g, respective­ly), while Student B received a grade two with a profile of A-A-C.

This discrepanc­y is but one of several inconsiste­ncies arising from this year’s CAPE and CSEC results.

In August, CXC’S registrar sought to assure candidates, their parents, prospectiv­e universiti­es, and employers who rely on the integrity of the examining body, that the results from the new exam format would be “valid, equivalent and fair”. However, in light of the anomalies, all stakeholde­rs need to consider whether or not this is truly the case.

Prior to the start of the exams, CXC introduced a revised examinatio­n strategy in which school-based assessment­s (SBAS) or internal assessment­s (IAS) along with one common paper, Paper 1, would be administer­ed to determine students’ final grades. Paper 2 would not be administer­ed. But critical to note, the registrar emphasised the weighting of the other components would remain the same. That being said, what other meaning could anyone derive from that? Implicitly, that statement suggested the marking scheme, pass mark, and profiles would remain the same. Therefore, if CXC actually used another construct to produce final grades it would amount to being disingenuo­us and could jeopardise its integrity.

After the exams were administer­ed, the CXC registrar again addressed stakeholde­rs emphasisin­g the need for equivalenc­e; that is, ensuring that each year “candidates who earn the same grade demonstrat­e the same level of performanc­e”. In other words, if every year approximat­ely 50 per cent of Jamaican students pass CSEC mathematic­s, then this year, no matter how easy the exam, grades must reflect the same 50 per cent, plus or minus a few percentage points. And if they don’t, they will be manipulate­d until they do. But why wasn’t this communicat­ed to candidates prior to the sitting of the exams? It would certainly have provided an opportunit­y for parents who were uncomforta­ble to consider their options. The truth is, equivalenc­e cannot truly exist in this year’s exams because Paper 2 was not assessed. It is this paper that best demonstrat­es students’ level of reasoning and use of knowledge. Moreover, the 2020 exam was administer­ed during a pandemic, an unpreceden­ted era; can CXC quantify the true impact of that type of atmosphere on their candidates and their performanc­e? Or are they more concerned that a sharp increase in grades one or two arising from students sitting Paper 1 only would damage the credibilit­y of their examinatio­n body?

Last week, the CXC Registrar Dr Wayne Wesley was interviewe­d on Beyond the Headlines. Responding to concerns about student expectatio­n not matching the grades they had received, he explained that students could not know their final SBA scores as they were all moderated. Every single SBA and IA was moderated by CXC. Has anyone ever picked up a lab book, per se, for CSEC chemistry and examined the 20-plus labs; each with tables, graphs, calculatio­ns, etc? It is no easy task to peruse all of those lab books, and if indeed they had the manpower to recheck and recalculat­e every one of them, why didn’t they allow the students to sit their Paper 2 then? One of the reasons given for omitting that paper was the lengthy marking process. CXC’S website does not provide any informatio­n about pass marks or the percentile range associated with each grade which would enable candidates to readily quantify what a specific grade represents. However, it has long been believed that a grade one is awarded for scores ranging from a minimum of about 70 per cent or 75 per cent of the sum of all papers and SBAS combined. This year, rumour has it that CXC increased the pass mark by shifting the percentile ranges upwards for each grade. But what specific percentile range constitute­d

each grade level for the 2020 CSEC and CAPE exams? Were all multiple choice items equally weighted? How was ‘the trend’ in teachers’ prediction­s used, if any at all, to determine a student’s final grade? A student who got 18/20 for her SBA, and projected she got at least 52/60 on Paper 1, how does that student end up with a grade four? There are too many unknown factors. It’s like students signed an agreement without knowing its terms and conditions. Transparen­cy is lacking.

Last month, there was a similar uproar from British students relating to the manner by which the examining body OFQUAL (Office of Qualificat­ions and Examinatio­ns Regulation in England) arrived at their final grades. The calculated grades based on a mathematic­al model were eventually abandoned and replaced with teacher-predicted grades. Important to note, upon making the change, OFQUAL acknowledg­ed that some students’ grades would have been lowered. So, to resolve same, they advised all the stakeholde­rs that students were allowed to retain the higher of the two grades. The point is, the examining body exercised

leniency and flexibilit­y.

Students did not bring this pandemic on themselves. They did not choose to sit Paper 1 only. They complied at every point of the process and, in the best interest of transparen­cy, credibilit­y and integrity, the region’s examinatio­n body needs to reassess the grades they awarded. That is fairness!

The confidence of our 2020 candidates must not suffer at the hands of the region’s examinatio­n mogul. Their hard work must be properly compensate­d and not merely skewed to fit on a curve so as to maintain equivalenc­e. As parents, we welcome the news that an independen­t team will be addressing the concerns of our children. We trust that the Minister of Education Fayval Williams will be resolute in her quest to unearth the real grades that students received prior to the adjustment for equivalenc­e. The 2020 candidates revised numerous past papers with their teachers. They went into those exams prepared and executed. At no time can 18 + 52 be a grade four. CXC, please give them their due.

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