Tuesday, June 12, 2018

  • 9 Jun 2018 | Pune | Neelam Pandey

School report cards to drop grades, marks

NEW DELHI : The progress report (or report card) of students between classes 1 and 8 should no longer carry comments such as slow, poor, and dull, and will also not display any scores or grades, so as to prevent underperformers from developing a sense of inferiority, according to a revised government policy guideline that Hindustan Times has seen.

Schools will have to maintain the progress report in the form of a diary or a log which will require teachers to simply tick a scale linked to the learning outcomes achieved by the student, the guideline says.

These changes are part of revised policy guidelines called Continuous Comprehensive Evaluation, commonly known as ‘CCE’ which was introduced as school-based system of evaluation as per Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 (RTE Act, 2009), implemented in April 2010. The policy guidelines have been shared with the states.

Education is a so-called concurrent subject in India, which means both the centre and the states have the right to make laws on it.

The National Council for Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has prepared
the document which will be applicable for classes 1 to 8.

Earlier the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) was the implementing body for CCE. NCERT director Hrushikesh Senapaty said the guidelines have been shared with all the states for their comments and a national conclave will be held to finalise the policy.

The Act requires that Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation be implemented for children till the completion of elementary schooling.

It has also been suggested that separate progress report cards should be maintained for children at various stages — primary and upper primary.

This will help trace the learning progression within and across stages.

“Only specific observations pertaining to children’s performance and behaviour which need to be highlighted to facilitate both students and teachers reflect and review their work, may only be noted in a diary or a logbook. The observations on learning outcomes depicting Personal Social Qualities (PSQs) may be noted as and when required/noticed,” says the policy

The guidelines have been developed keeping three major purposes of assessment in mind: ‘for Learning’, ‘as Learning’ and ‘of Learning’. It also involves getting students to evaluate themselves as well as their peers.

“It is important that the skills of reflection and critically reviewing one’s own work are developed over a period of time. For this opportunity need to be given right from early stages and the teachers need to be patient in this process,” the policy says.

An educationist welcomed the guidelines as progressive but said it was important to display the same approach beyond class 8.

“This kind of system can easily be implemented by schools from nursery to class 8, and some progressive schools already do it... but the problem is what comes after class 8. In class 9-12, the students are abruptly pushed into a system of scores, marks and exams; this can be traumatic. We need to rework the entire education system from nursery to class 12, and then our higher education as well,” said Ameeta Wattal, the principal of Springdales School Pusa Road in Delhi.



Source : http://paper.hindustantimes.com/epaper/viewer.aspx

Sun Jun 10 2018

MISSION ADMISSION

Do marks for extra-curricular give SSC pupils ‘unfair’ edge?

Principals Of Other Boards Say Practice Must End

Mumbai:
 
As the number of SSC students benefiting from the extra marks for art and culture doubled to 1.6 lakh this year as compared to 2017, principals from other boards are worried about the impact it will have on admissions and the disadvantage their students could face. State board principals, on the other hand, want to encourage the practice so that more students work on overall development.

In the SSC exam of 2017, the first year that the extra marks for art and culture were introduced, as many as 81,726 students in the state had applied for the additional marks. In Mumbai, more than 16,000 students applied under the two categories and 95% of these got extra marks for drawing. This year, the number doubled in the Mumbai division and the state. This year too, the maximum number of students got it for excelling in drawing.

Principals of non-state board schools feel that the extra marks are unfair in the admission race. “Every board competing with each other has led to students scoring near-perfect scores. When students from all boards compete for admissions, the state board students now have an advantage because of the marks for extra-curricular activity. Instead of giving them extra marks, the education department should create a quota in the admissions which will be applicable for all boards,” said the principal of a CBSE school.

When the education department capped the extra marks for art and culture in November last year, it discontinued the 2% reservation in the first year junior college admissions.

State board officials attributed the increase to better awareness this year. And state board school principals feel the numbers should increase in the coming years. “The other boards have near perfect scores even without the extra marks and our students get left out in the admissions race. The additional marks for extra-curricular in fact ensure that students don’t concentrate on just academics, but also pursue their passion,” said Prashant Redij, member of Mumbai’s Principals’ Association.

 
 
Source : https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive /ODN/TimesOfIndia/#