Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fewer Provincial Exams, More In-Class Assessment In B.C. Starting Next Year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 May, 2016 01:17 PM
    VICTORIA — High school students will be required to write only two provincial exams instead of five before they graduate as part of a new curriculum being rolled out in British Columbia.
     
    Education Minister Mike Bernier says Grade 10 math and Grades 10 to 12 literacy concepts will be the only subjects to be formally tested starting in the next school year.
     
    Teachers will assess Grade 10 math, language arts and science in the classroom instead of through provincial exams.
     
     
    Bernier says that between June and October, parents will be consulted on how they wish to be informed about their child's progress other than every few months through a report card.
     
    He says students will also be required to take career education to graduate starting in the 2017-18 school year.
     
    Some parents have criticized the new curriculum, saying students need more foundational math skills, for example, but Bernier says the focus will remain on the basics of reading, writing and math.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    All-Party Committee Will Study How To Sanction Justin Trudeau For Commons Fracas

    One expert says the Liberal majority on the all-party committee of procedure and House affairs means it's unlikely Trudeau will face any punishment.

    All-Party Committee Will Study How To Sanction Justin Trudeau For Commons Fracas

    Meet The Man Who Will Help Draw The Blueprint For Canada's Economic Future

    Meet The Man Who Will Help Draw The Blueprint For Canada's Economic Future
     For Dominic Barton, the invitation to apply his decades worth of experience as an international economic fixer at home was a "duty" he didn't want to pass up.

    Meet The Man Who Will Help Draw The Blueprint For Canada's Economic Future

    After The Elbow: Ruth Ellen Brosseau Target Of Personal Attacks Since Commons Encounter

    After The Elbow: Ruth Ellen Brosseau Target Of Personal Attacks Since Commons Encounter
    Brosseau, who admits to still being personally shaken by the incident, says her office has received a number phone calls, many of them suggesting she is "crying wolf."

    After The Elbow: Ruth Ellen Brosseau Target Of Personal Attacks Since Commons Encounter

    Disease Found In Salmon On One Fish Farm In B.C. But More Research Needed

    VANCOUVER — Scientists have detected a potential disease in farmed Atlantic salmon for the first time in British Columbia, but say more research is needed to determine if it could affect wild populations of the fish.

    Disease Found In Salmon On One Fish Farm In B.C. But More Research Needed

    Terrorism-related Peace Bond To Be Lifted For P.E.I. University Student

    Terrorism-related Peace Bond To Be Lifted For P.E.I. University Student
    CHARLOTTETOWN — The lawyer for a P.E.I. man accused of having enough castor beans to produce the deadly toxin ricin says his client will soon be freed from the conditions of a peace bond he signed a year ago.

    Terrorism-related Peace Bond To Be Lifted For P.E.I. University Student

    B.C. Government To Add 2,700 New Seats In Surrey's Overcrowded Schools

    B.C. Government To Add 2,700 New Seats In Surrey's Overcrowded Schools
    The B.C. government has announced funding for as many as 2,700 new spaces in Surrey's public schools.

    B.C. Government To Add 2,700 New Seats In Surrey's Overcrowded Schools