Fraser Institute News Release: B.C.’s new student ‘assessments’ vastly inferior to previous exams in measuring student and school performance
August 29 2024 - 5:00AM
The British Columbia government’s new student “assessments” in high
schools are much less valuable and useful than the previous exams
in measuring student and school performance, finds a new study
published today by the Fraser Institute, an independent,
non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.
“The new assessment regime is vastly inferior to the previous
provincial exams, which the government has eliminated for high
school students in the province,” said Paige MacPherson, associate
director of education policy at the Fraser Institute and author of
The End of Accountability in British Columbia High School
Student Performance.
The changes took place in stages beginning in 2015 when the B.C.
government replaced the province’s grades 10 and 12 provincial high
school exams—which affected final grades and were based on course
content—with student “assessments” in numeracy and literacy. By
deemphasizing content knowledge, the new assessments are vaguer
with respect to measuring student progression and knowledge.
And while the previous exams contributed to students’ final
grades—in other words, they were meaningful to students and their
school careers—the new assessments do not affect a student’s
grades.
“The absence of any real consequences for student grades or
graduation calls into question the usefulness and veracity of the
new assessments,” MacPherson said.
And although the assessments are technically “mandatory” for
graduation, fewer students now complete these assessments compared
to the previous exams.
For example, in 2021/22 (the latest year of available data),
participation in the Grade 10 numeracy assessment was 22.3
percentage points lower than participation in the Grade 10 math
exams in 2015/16. During the same time period, it was a similar
story for the Grade 10 literacy assessment vs. Grade 10 English
exams (17.1 percentage points lower participation) and the Grade 12
literacy assessment vs. Grade 12 English exams (14.2 percentage
points lower participation).
“Oddly, graduation rates have increased even though
participation rates for the assessments—which are supposed to be
mandatory—have declined,” MacPherson said.
As a result of the questionable quality of the new assessments,
the Fraser Institute will no longer publish the British Columbia
Secondary Schools Report Card, which had been published since 1998.
And parents, educators and policymakers will no longer have access
to this provincewide objective and comparative measure of high
school performance in B.C.
“By degrading student testing, the B.C. government has done a
great disservice to families across the province,” MacPherson
said.
MEDIA CONTACT: Paige MacPherson, Associate
Director, Education Policy, Fraser Institute
To arrange media interviews or for more information, please
contact:Mark Hasiuk, Senior Media Relations Specialist,
604-688-0221 ext. 517,mark.hasiuk@fraserinstitute.org
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The Fraser Institute is an independent Canadian public policy
research and educational organization with offices in Vancouver,
Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal and ties to a global network of
think-tanks in 87 countries. Its mission is to improve the quality
of life for Canadians, their families and future generations by
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