|
March 7, 2003
Alberta has no deal with Nunavut, spokesperson says
GN won't approve standardized
testing
PATRICIA
D'SOUZA
The Alberta government
has no deal in place with the Iqaluit District Education Authority to supply
standardized tests to Nunavut students, a spokesperson for Alberta Learning
said in an interview last month.
"Our understanding
is there has been no agreement," said Mark Cooper, a communications representative
for Alberta Learning, the province's education department. "We know nothing
about that. It's not the case."
Furthermore, Cooper said
it is unlikely the provincial government would strike a deal with a parents'
association like the IDEA. While Alberta provides standardized testing and evaluation
for the Northwest Territories, that arrangement is between governments.
The Nunavut government
isn't prepared to enter into such an arrangement said Naullaq Arnaquq, the assistant
deputy minister for the Nunavut department of education.
"All standardized
tests have to be approved [by the GN]," she said. "[The IDEA] can't
give unauthorized tests."
David Lloyd, the manager
of evaluation frameworks for the department of education, concurred. "No,
[standardized testing cannot proceed] not without the minister's approval,"
he said. "That's the issue."
And until the department
completes a draft policy for testing and evaluation this spring, the GN won't
be administering standardized tests either.
However, Arnaquq added,
the department is currently examining the tests administered in different Canadian
jurisdictions and hopes to create a method of evaluation suitable for Nunavut
students in English and Inuktitut.
"We need to review
the tests. Our staff are doing that," she said.
She said that administering Alberta's stringent test would be unfair to Iqaluit
students.
"It wouldn't be fair
to the students or staff in the English stream."
She repeated the department's message that they're not saying no to standardized
testing.
"We want to do testing.
The teachers need that," she said. "As a department we have to give
that kind of direction. That's our role."
The IDEA voted last month
to implement standardized testing to Grade 3, 6 and 9 students in the English
stream.
It was the culmination
of four years of work for IDEA members, who believed that the Alberta government
would provide the tests for free.
In an interview in early
February, Kathy Smith, the chair of the IDEA said the group would go ahead with
its plans until someone in government said stop.
"We have not received
permission. We haven't been told not to [implement standardized testing]. We'll
leave it at that," she said.
Smith was on holiday this
week and couldn't be reached for comment. Jeannie Eeseemailie, the vice-chair
of the IDEA, refused to comment.
|