Blog 5
Chapter
5 explained the role of curriculum in the Canadian School System. Understanding the history behind the
way in which curriculum has been developed is important as it allows a deeper
knowledge of curricular material.
It
did not surprise me to read about the section of parental influence on
curriculum. I was interested to
find out that one of the largest concerns parents did have was on the reading
material provided to students. I
think that it is important that parents have a say in what their children are
exposed to. Chapter 5 stated “the
Freedom of Expression Committee monitors censorship issues in Canada, including
books that parents have made cases for removing from school curricula and libraries. Jenkinson (1986) indicates that most
advocates of banning particular books in schools are individual parents” (page
131). Since there is such a wide
spectrum of reading material
available, I think that parents should be alert and cautious of what their
children are exposed to in schools, as the content may include various
conflicting beliefs. Regardless if
offensive reading materials are banned or not, I think that parents should be
made aware of what their child is exposed to in the classroom, and therefore
can have conversations with their child about the material in question or with
the teacher.
I
was unaware that the Fraser Institute in Vancouver was releasing “report cards”
based on various schools, where “the purpose of these rankings, according to
the Fraser Institute, is that by “combining a variety of relevant, objective
indicators of school performance into one easily accessible public document,
the school report cards allow teachers, parents, school administrators
students, and taxpayers to analyze and compare the academic performance of
individual schools” (page 137-138).
Perhaps this is helpful in ensuring that schools are following
curriculum that they are supposed to, however, I feel that it would certainly
put a lot of pressure on teachers to ensure their students are succeeding. There can definitely be benefits to
comparing schools on a level such as this, but I feel that this can certainly
lead to a lot of unrest.
Furthermore,
the text went on to explain various national and international levels of
assessment, and also stated that there is controversy with this sort of testing
style, as “raw scores from such tests ignore how these and other factors
influence how students do on the assessments, instead shifting the blame to
teachers. The outcomes of tests
also fail to take into consideration that many schools and classrooms are
greatly under-resourced. Poor test
scores may be attributable to this lack of resources experienced by many
teachers” (page 144). As a future teacher,
I would have to agree that it is not fair to blame teachers for poor
standardized test scores in most cases.
There are a lot of factors that contribute to test scores, as was
previously mentioned. I remember
not enjoying standardized tests back when I was in high school—especially when
it came to math. I am not sure if
standardized tests are quite the right way to go to see where students are at,
especially since not all students thrive at taking tests.
Discussion Question:
What has been your experience with standardized tests? Do you believe they offer an accurate
view of a student’s academic knowledge?
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