My son told me that remote learning was teaching him which were his most and least favorite subjects. Perhaps by removing friends and the hustle and bustle of school life, he’s finding that remote learning is somehow distilling and concentrating each subject into its essence, bringing certain otherwise hidden things to light.
I have heard some other comments from students and parents which provide similar insights. These comments have arisen from our decision to cancel end of year examinations in light of the extended remote learning (if we return to school before the end of the academic year we want to spend the time in classrooms, not exam halls), and go along the lines of:
- I don’t like working without any assessments
- How can we get grades without the end of year tests?
- for moral reasons, as it gives students multiple pathways to demonstrate their capabilities, and does not privilege those who excel purely on tests
- for accuracy reasons, as tests can only ever capture limited facets. Some very capable students do not do themselves justice in their exams, and others will sometimes just get lucky!
- for practical reasons as we want students to take seriously tasks which we know will be important throughout their lives (if you look at the elements of assessment in the diagram, exams and tests seem to be the least relevant beyond school).
In these days of remote learning, this means we can award grades as we have always done, because we still have many assessment elements in place – with more emphasis on formative rather than summative assessment. Adopting model two, the answers to the student comments are simple:
- I don’t like working without any assessments: No problem – all your work is still being assessed; your contributions to class in Google Meet; your written work; your work in groups, the videos where you explain your thinking… it all counts – in fact, even more now that there are no exams.
- How can we get grades without the end of year tests? By taking into account everything we know about you – which is a lot. Removing the tests is regrettable, as it would be for any element, but we still have multiple ways to assess.
Model two has always been our approach – it’s always been how we award the end of year grades that appear in the High School transcripts and are used by Universities for students in Grades 11 and 12. Nothing has changed other than the removal of one single element of this grade. As we continue to navigate the unexpected twists and turns of remote learning, I am hoping that developing shared understandings with our community here will be one of the long-term benefits.
- On PISA Tests: Put a Bounty on Snakes, You Get More Snakes.
- The Importance of Knowing Stuff and Excelling in Examinations
- How valuable are exams? A family view.
- Why can’t you just make it simple?
- Testing, Exams, Karate, Newton
- Assessment, Grading – putting a number to students’ understandings
- What are the connections? Feedback, Grading, Motivation