Ed Walsh
The startling rate at which the Irish school system is falling behind was highlighted in last December’s OECD’s PISA report
• In a decade reading levels in Ireland have dropped from 5th to 17th.
• 23 per cent of male teenagers are functionally illiterate.
• In only three years Ireland’s math ranking has dropped from 16th to 26th place
Also multinational heavyweights, such as Craig Barrett of Intel, John Herlihy of Google and Ray Stata of Analog Devices are no longer lauding the Irish educational system. They are doing otherwise and speaking frankly of its serious deficiencies. They highlight their frustration in having to look abroad for the talents they require in Ireland, such as communication skills, understanding of interpersonal relationships, mastery of modern European languages, entrepreneurial skills, and common sense.
Studies, by Calvin Taylor , of the University of Utah and others,
have long established that the typical formal examination is capable of
assessing only some one-quarter of those attributes that contribute to a
person’s success in later life. Formal examinations are good for
measuring mathematical and linguistic competence, but are less likely to
detect those human characteristics associated with success as a
citizen, an employee or a parent. Because of Ireland’s narrow assessment
system there is little scope for recognising or fostering such valuable
characteristics as reliability, determination, entrepreneurship,
intuition, common sense, sensitivity and consideration for others;
characteristics vital for personal success and the well being of the
community.
In 1972, when we were admitting the first 100 students to NIHE, Limerick
from the group of over 1,000 who applied, we decided that, in addition
to requiring achievement in the Leaving Certificate, applicants would be
expected to submit an assessment by their teachers. The following is an
extract from my diary for the year in which Limerick’s NIHE began
admitting its first students:
Friday 7 January 1972
LIMERICK A day designing student application forms. The Leaving
Certificate alone does not identify communication ability, involvement
in classroom activities, pursuit of independent study, critical and
questioning attitude, personal responsibility, and consideration for
others. Our form required teachers to give ratings under these headings.
The response told us that teachers had little difficulty in providing the assessments we required. Their judgement played a key role in the admission of what turned out to be an exceptional group of pioneering students.
In this we were reverting to an earlier era when educators were expected to focus on nurturing those personal skills and values that contribute to healthy and stable society, success at work and a caring family life. The narrowness of the Leaving Certificate curriculum and the tyranny of the CAO points-based system have produced a situation that neither fosters nor rewards those human characteristics that society most needs and employers cherish.
Many of the countries with the world’s best school systems rely, not
on a centralised Leaving Certificate type examination, but on the
continuous assessment of pupils by their teachers
o Finland and Sweden both have long-established school-based assessment
systems utilizing a wide range of open-ended tasks and challenging
classroom-based assignments. Such school-based assessments, embedded in
the curriculum, are often cited as an important reason for the high
levels of educational achievement in those countries.
o School-based assessment has been the standard mode of assessment in
Canadian schools for many years with teachers taking responsibility for
all assessment processes and judgments at the school-level.
o New Zealand also has a long history of school-based assessment and has developed a wide variety of teacher support materials.
It is fortunate that Ireland now has a capable, experienced and determined Minister for Education in Ruairi Quinn, who can be expected to see the merit in decreasing the dominance of the narrow, centralised Leaving Certificate exam and phasing in school-based teacher assessment, based on practice in those countries that have the world’s best school systems.