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February 14, 2003
IDEA to implement standardized
testing
Alberta Government offers
service free for English-language students only
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
Members of the Iqaluit
District Education Authority voted this week to implement standardized, or "assessment,"
tests in Iqaluit schools before the end of the school year.
The motion passed narrowly,
with three votes for standardized testing, two votes against it and one abstention.
The vote ended a heated
discussion during the Feb. 10 meeting that had some members questioning why
the IDEA was pursuing special measures for the most privileged group in the
Nunavut education system.
The two tests math
and language would be administered in English to Grade 3, 6 and 9 students
in the English stream.
"At the end we will
have taken a bold step, but we will have served 15 per cent of the population,"
said Caroline Anawak, one of three members appointed to the IDEA last fall.
The IDEA has been pursuing
the issue of standardized testing for about four years, but has received only
vague responses from the department of education.
In a meeting with IDEA
members in December 2001, Education Minister Peter Kilabuk said the complicating
factor is language. "Standardized testing is probably going to be difficult
in Nunavut," he is recorded as saying in the IDEA minutes of the meeting.
"Students are taught
in Inuktitut. We could not implement this. How do I put students to a test when
there is such a lack of curriculum for Inuktitut?" he said.
Letters have gone back
and forth between the department and the IDEA several times since then. Each
time Kilabuk has reacted negatively to the proposal but come short of saying
no.
Kathy Smith, the chair
of the IDEA, suspects this is because the Education Act may actually give DEAs
the right to administer such tests.
"Theyve said,
Well form a committee, theyve said, Well
look at it, but they havent said no," she said. "Possibly
because they dont know if they have the authority."
So IDEA members did some
research. They found that the Alberta government was willing to administer the
tests and provide results for free under the same arrangement the province has
with the Northwest Territories.
The curriculum used in
Nunavut schools is adapted from the Alberta curriculum, so this wouldnt
be such a stretch.
The IDEA registered with
test administrators and ordered information handbooks for parents. All thats
left is for testing to begin in late May or early June.
Although the work has been
slow and plodding, some members wondered this week if they were moving too fast.
"I think were
a little premature in trying to get standardized testing. When there is an Inuktitut
curriculum in Nunavut, then we should have our own testing," said Annie
Ford, another newly appointed member.
"If you want to wait
until the Government of Nunavut creates a Nunavut-wide curriculum and creates
its own tests, then the next 20 years of children, might as well write them
off, say, Were not going to worry about them," Smith
said.
Ford said testing makes
sense in Grade 9, when students have a grasp on the English language. But she
said that students in Grades 3 and 6 are still learning to learn.
"I have a child in
Grade 3. Hes not going to pass that test. Hes going to fail. What
is the purpose of the test?" she said.
"Not to pick on your
son," Smith said.
"Are we going to get
more funding if our kids are failing?" Ford said. "Thats not
going to happen because its from the Nunavut government that we get our
funding not from Alberta."
Exactly how the results
will be used is a question that cant really be answered until the results
come in, but it seems that the only results that will benefit the IDEA are poor
results.
"If students are at
grade level at Grade 3 and theyre not at Grade 9 that tells a story,"
Smith said. "That tells us something happens between there where something
isnt happening."
Theres another problem,
too. Alberta posts school results online, for anyone to see. Its a way
of keeping the system accountable. Would the same practice be used in Iqaluit?
IDEA members werent so sure.
"I know many teachers
will not be happy. Many parents will not be happy," said longtime IDEA
member Jeannie Eeseemailie. "I, too, am very scared what the results will
be."
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