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Maralyn Parker的原文
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http://blogs.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/maralynparker/index.php/dailytelegraph/comments/teacher_union_chopping_the_facts/
Teacher union chopping the facts
The NSW Teachers Federation has launched a campaign against league tables that I believe is a deeply damaging for public education. It is misleading and misinforming parents and the public.
You must have seen it by now, the television advertisement where the apple is chopped to the core while a voiceover says this is happening to the school curriculum. There are five different radio grabs to go with it.
The most iniquitous is one of the radio messages (third on on the site) where a mother says she discovered her Year 7 son is dumbing down his writing by using short “kindergarten material” sentences so his school can get good NAPLAN results. She gives examples:The man slipped over. He hurt his knee. He started to bleed.
Parents and students should know this union message is very wrong. If a Year 7 student uses such simple sentences in their NAPLAN writing task they will be marked down not up.
There are ten criteria used to give students marks for their NAPLAN writing task including sentence structure, where students are marked up for using compound and complex sentences and a variety of clause types and patterns.
Other criteria include text structure, use of words, ideas and cohesion. Students are marked up for sophisticated vocabulary, mature viewpoints, extended metaphors and creative ideas. For more click on 2009 Narrative Marking Guide at the bottom of the page here .
Every Year 7 English teacher in every public high school in NSW should be horrified the union is running an ad that implies they have no idea what is being tested in a Year 7 NAPLAN writing test.
Which brings me to the significant point - if NSW teachers are teaching to the Australian NAPLAN tests they are teaching to the curriculum and they are teaching the most important elements. As far as English writing goes this means encouraging children to be creative and to develop extensive language skills.
Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Council for Educational Research professor, Geoff Masters, also makes the point, “Some schools are not spending enough time on core elements. We know there are significant numbers of Australian students not meeting the minimum standard.’’ ACER develops and marks NAPLAN tests.
According to reports on the Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA) website, from between four to 12 per cent of NSW students are below the minimum standards in literacy and numeracy. In other states, for remote students for example, this rises to half or even three quarters of students.
But talking of cores. The union’s television ad showing an apple being chopped down mentions art and music, drama, sport, personal development and critical thinking saying “It happened in England, it will happen here.’’
Whatever happened in England will not happen here because our government has not set up tests specially to reduce schools to one number. Nor does it rank schools or label any as “inadequate’’ as the English government does. This is not a small difference.
What offends me most about the ad is it is saying NSW public school teachers, obviously not private school teachers where the tests are not banned, will stop teaching anything but literacy and numeracy because they want to appear higher in lists published in a few newspapers.
In Australia the national skills testing program is specially developed to do two things. The first is for teachers of Years 3,5 7 and 9 to diagnose where their students are under-performing in literacy and numeracy and to do something about it.
The second is to give governments, school authorities, schools and teachers a snapshot of standards and how they compare.
Julia Gillard is sharing that snapshot with you on the MySchool website. It is quite a legitimate use of NAPLAN results, much as the union hates it.
However, as the website says, it is just a snapshot. It explains clearly the smaller the school the less accurate the snapshot.
You should also know school financial information will soon be added to MySchool. The unions, among others, have criticised the absence of such information.
So when you get a letter from the NSWTF - it is sending out 150,000 letters to parents - saying MySchool is inaccurate and incomplete and must be improved to provide “meaningful and accurate information for parents’’ these are the main issues it is referring to.
Of course you won’t get such detail from the NSWTF. The union has absolutely no intention of providing anything of the sort for parents. |
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