Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. moved ahead with ending letter grades despite parent, teacher, student concerns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jun, 2023 04:31 PM
  • B.C. moved ahead with ending letter grades despite parent, teacher, student concerns

British Columbia's Ministry of Education went ahead with plans to do away with letter grades from Kindergarten to Grade 9 despite its own public consultation showing the majority of teachers, students and parents didn't like the idea. 

A 97-page report completed in 2021 for the Education Ministry includes a survey of more than 4,000 people on the government's new policy which includes assessing younger students as emerging, developing, proficient or extending, instead of grading them A to F. 

Overall, the document says 69 per cent of people reported being dissatisfied with the policy and only 13 per cent were satisfied, with the  dissatisfaction rate highest among teachers at 77 per cent, followed by students at 68 per cent. 

Education Minister Rachna Singh said last week that about half of all public school districts have already tested and adopted the new reporting style during a modernization of curriculum that started in 2016, while the rest would implement the change this September.

The minister said report cards will continue to update parents and caregivers about students' progress and prepare students to succeed, whether in post-secondary education or in the future careers of their choice.

More than half the teachers reported low satisfaction when surveyed specifically about the so-called proficiency scale that would replace the letter grades, while 60 per cent of parents or caregivers and 83 per cent of students didn't like the change.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. casinos will require all to show government ID under self-exclusion program

B.C. casinos will require all to show government ID under self-exclusion program
The corporation says the measure will be rolled out this summer, with more details to be announced in coming weeks, including the implementation date. It says security staff will scan IDs that will be automatically checked against a list of people who are taking part in the Game Break self-exclusion program.

B.C. casinos will require all to show government ID under self-exclusion program

Canadian gets 9 years in jail for stabbing Indian to death

Canadian gets 9 years in jail for stabbing Indian to death
Prabhjot Singh Katri, the 23-year-old who moved from India to Nova Scotia in 2017, was stabbed in the neck by Cameron James Prosper on September 5, 2021, as he was walking to his car after leaving a friend's apartment at 494 Robie St in Truro, the Global News reported.

Canadian gets 9 years in jail for stabbing Indian to death

WestJet issues strike notice

WestJet issues strike notice
The pilots are warning the airline could be shut down on Friday, right before the May long weekend. The pilots want better job protection, pay and scheduling, noting about 340 pilots have left WestJet over the past 18-months -- mostly for other airlines

WestJet issues strike notice

Joly promotes friendship with South Korea as Canada seeks closer ties

Joly promotes friendship with South Korea as Canada seeks closer ties
Joly arrived in the South Korean capital with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who's making his first official visit to the country as the two governments try to build closer ties and work together on global security concerns.

Joly promotes friendship with South Korea as Canada seeks closer ties

Annual pace of inflation rose in April

Annual pace of inflation rose in April
BMO senior economist Robert Kavcic says while the first big drop-down in inflation was quick and relatively easy, this next stage is proving to be quite a bit tougher. He says it appears underlying core inflation is settling in around four per cent, which is clearly still too high for the Bank of Canada's comfort. 

Annual pace of inflation rose in April

B.C. to refer some cancer patients to Washington to cut radiation therapy wait

B.C. to refer some cancer patients to Washington to cut radiation therapy wait
Starting May 29th, Adrian Dix says B-C Cancer will offer eligible patients the opportunity to undergo treatment at one of two partner clinics in Bellingham, with costs related to treatment, travel, accommodation and meals fully covered.

B.C. to refer some cancer patients to Washington to cut radiation therapy wait