"It is the policy of OSSTF that no standardized test should be a
mandatory requirement for graduation from Secondary School." ( AMPA
2002, OSSTF Policy 8.6.3)
OSSTF downloadable pamphlet:
What's
wrong with provincial testing?
CONCERNS:
 |
The Grade 10 literacy test is now a graduation requirement for ALL
students in Ontario. |
 |
The EQAO Grade 10 literacy test is not a fair measure.
 | The test is not administered consistently across the province.
It is impossible to standardize preparation and administration
conditions in a standardized test. |
 | According to Alfie Kohn, who crusades against standardized
tests in the United States, socioeconomic status accounts for
"an overwhelming proportion of the variance in test
scores". |
 | Time is taken away from the regular curriculum in preparing for
the test. Student anxiety affects learning in other areas. |
|
 | The EQAO Grade 10 literacy test is not a valid
measure of student reading and writing.
 | The test is very heavily weighted to writing. |
 | Students need over 60% in BOTH reading and
writing to pass. |
 | No marked tests will be returned. Students who fail receive
limited, vague feedback. |
 | There are very few funds or opportunities to provide help to
students who perform poorly or fail. |
 | Instructions for questions are unclear. On a question which
asked for one paragraph, students who wrote more than one paragraph
failed the question because they did not follow the instructions
exactly. |
 | EQAO is secretive and will reveal neither the marking criteria
nor what constitutes a pass. |
|
 | Results were not available to most students by the end of June
2002, too late for any literacy improvement chances over the summer.
The next test is only six weeks after school starts in September. |
 | If students are absent on either day of the test, they will have to
rewrite. If students fail only one part of the test, they must rewrite
the whole test to get a diploma. |
 | As more students need to write the test, the disruption will spread
to more grades and impact more programs. Next year, instead of 140,000
students writing the test, there will be at least 160,000. This is an
additional cost and drain. |
 | A "one size fits all" test does not suit recent
immigrants, special education students, students in remote schools and
other students at risk. |
 | A paper and pencil test does not measure employability skills nor
does it encourage creative and critical thinking. |
 | The cost of last year’s literacy test was $15 million at the same
time as there were textbook shortages, and cuts to library, music,
guidance, educational assistants and support staff. |
ADVICE TO MEMBERS:
 | OSSTF is deeply troubled that the Grade 10 literacy test is now a
graduation requirement for ALL Ontario students. OSSTF has always
argued that the test should be diagnostic only and the focus
should be on the remediation and support required for
unsuccessful students. |
 | Members are reminded that they can be asked to administer the test
and sign the confidentiality agreement from EQAO. |
 | Members are strongly reminded that they are under NO
obligation to volunteer to mark any EQAO tests Members should
carefully consider the cost to their colleagues and students should
they agree to mark this literacy test. Members should be aware that by
marking this test, or any EQAO test, they are supporting a test
culture that hurts students! |
 | Educate parents, school councils, trustees and the community about
the potential dangers of using a standardized test, no matter how well
designed, as an absolute requirement for graduation. |
FYI:
 | The public strongly agrees that the best measure of student
academic achievement is classroom work and homework, not one single
test required for a diploma. |
 | There is "virtually unanimous agreement among experts that no
single measure should decide a student’s academic fate." Lynn
Olsen, Education Week April 5, 2000. |
 | Alfie Kohn states that the "tests are inherently destructive
to learning" and are "squeezing the intellectual life out of
the schools". He believes the Grade 10 test is "an
illegitimate credentialing device and violates professional
standards". |
 | Special interest groups in Ontario are already planning to misuse
the results of the Grade 10 test. The Ottawa Sun editorial of October
12, 2000 noted the test is "another overdue measure" that
will provide "a powerful tool for parents to assess how their
kids’ schools stack up (and)shop for the best available
alternatives". Alfie Kohn noted those who use the test to rank
schools are either "malicious or ignorant or both". |
 | To paraphrase an Ontario teacher, the Grade 10 test
"highlights a basic contradiction: high stakes testing requires
government enforced secrecy; democracy requires unfettered discussion
by knowledgeable participants." |
 | Once fully implemented, the government plan is that students will
be writing standardized tests, annually, in every grade, from grade 3
- 11, in a variety of core subject areas, with an annual estimated
cost of over $50 million that will drain even more funds, resources
and time from Ontario classrooms. |
Resources :
 | Additional information about this issue can be accessed at the
provincial OSSTF website: Student
Testing
 | This contains various fact sheets, reports and articles that
members can read to become familiar with the issue and with OSSTF’s
objections to it. This information can be used when speaking with
parents, or in letters to the editor, or when lobbying an MPP. |
|
 | Alfie Kohn is a reknowned expert who opposes high-stakes testing.
There are many articles and resources for Teachers and Parents at his
website. |
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