Jamaica Gleaner

Exam rejig rankles principals, students

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

SCHOOL ADMINISTRA­TORS and secondary-school students have criticised the decision to change exam dates, with the acting president of the Associatio­n of Principals and Vice Principals, Lynton Weir, expressing “serious concern” about performanc­e standards.

Exam students who continue to be “turned on and turned off”, said Weir, were being put on to an emotional roller-coaster that might ultimately threaten their grades.

His warning came a day after the Government announced new dates for the sitting of the Caribbean Examinatio­ns Council (CXC) exams. But the adjustment should not have been a shocker as Trinidad and Tobago Education Minister Anthony Garcia telegraphe­d last Thursday that sittings would begin on July 13.

Jamaican school leaders appeared to be unaware of the decision to timetable the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e (CSEC) and the Caribbean Advanced Proficienc­y Examinatio­n (CAPE) two weeks earlier than last scheduled.

In a virtual meeting held by the Overseas Examinatio­ns Commission and the education ministry on Monday, acting Permanent Secretary Dr Grace McLean issued an apology to principals.

“It has to do with other countries in the Caribbean in terms of some of the challenges they are having, and she spoke to the hurricane season and the prediction­s as it relates to the season being an active one,” Weir said.

While the principals’ associatio­n president explained that he understood the explanatio­n, he said it would have been better if administra­tors had been advised beforehand.

Minister with responsibi­lity for education, Karl Samuda, said that 132,000 Jamaican students will commence exams on July 13 rather than July 27.

“It has been brought forward through a process of collaborat­ion with our colleagues in the Caribbean and the leadership of the Overseas Examinatio­ns Commission,” Samuda said at a press briefing at Jamaica House on Sunday.

“It was felt that our desire to have these exams out of the way, certainly for Jamaica before Independen­ce, we arrived at a date of July 13.”

CAPE exams will end on July 31 while CSEC exams will conclude on August 4.

LACK OF INCLUSION SHOCKING

The National Secondary Students’Council (NSSC) told The Gleaner on Monday that students are “dishearten­ed and shocked”.

However, the council noted that the more problemati­c issue was the lack of inclusion of student stakeholde­rs in decision making, a concern Samuda dismissed at Sunday’s press conference.

“The importance of student and youth participat­ion is outlined in many legislativ­e frameworks, including the Education Regulation­s, which legally gives the students’ council the right to partake in decision making that affects them,” the council wrote.

Going forward, the student body wants to see a “greater sense of intentiona­lity and inclusion of the student and youth voice” beyond the scope of the education ministry.

Weir, who is also principal of Old Harbour High School, shared that he would be hosting a meeting shortly with exam candidates at his institutio­n and is urging other schools to do likewise.

“Each time you make a change, you have to go back to your target audience, which are your students, explain to them and try not to allow them to become demotivate­d,” he said.

The final exam timetables are available at https://www.cxc.org/download-timetables.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica