Exam: The God
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| Illustration by ChatGPT |
The ultimate purpose of schooling is to score well in
the final exam. That defeats the entire vision of education.
When I left Delhi and joined a school,
a highly reputed one, in Kerala where I chose to settle down in the autumn of
my life, one of the first things I did in the classroom was to stop dictating
notes on lessons. The parents were worried. The principal, a very efficient
administrator with extraordinarily clear views on whatever concerns the school,
cautioned me. “We have a reputation for most of our students scoring A1 (the
highest grade) in English,” he said implying that such a result owed to the
teacher-given notes which the students reproduced in the answer sheets.
What use is teaching language that
way? That was my question. Language is a means for self-expression. And that
has to be done in each student’s own style. How will that style develop unless
they write their own answers? I was fortunate that the principal chose to place
his trust in me in this regard. His trust was rewarded when the results came at
the end of the session. Many of the parents were surprised too.
My students weren’t surprised. They knew
they would do well. Because I had ensured that the lessons went deep into their
consciousness. There were meaningful discussions in the class where every student
was free to express their views openly and freely even if the view was not quite
socially acceptable. Occasionally this did get me into trouble. Some parents
objected to certain discussions that took place in the class and complained to
the principal who cautioned me again as gently as he could. He knew that I was
doing the right thing, but I had to remember also that I was teaching in a
village school.
The long and short of this is that
you can teach without keeping the terrifying hum of the exam’s “winged chariot”
in the back of the student’s consciousness all the time. Exam need not be a
terror at all. On the contrary, it can be fun. It depends on how you prepare
your student for that.
Of course, I’m aware of the demands
of the contents – I dealt with this in the last
post. I was lucky to be an English teacher and CBSE’s English syllabus is
quite frivolous. The good side of that is it gives the teacher ample time to play
with it. The point is that the teachers of the other subjects should get that
luxury too. Then the game will change. Rather, learning will become a game, not
a mad rush towards exams.
What the National Education Policy of
2020 tried to do was to make the assessment more meaningful and less stressful.
But in practice, it made it just the opposite – with endless evaluation
processes in various names like formative assessment and competency-based
assessment. The progress card of each student has now to provide a holistic,
360-degree view of a learner’s progress, including self-assessment, peer
assessment, and teacher assessment. [For details: NEP 4.34-4.42] The upshot of
all this is that the teacher’s burden multiplied manifold and the student’s
standard has deteriorated. Marks are given generously in the name of internal
assessments and other such labels. Students are happy. And hollow. [I will be
dealing with the hollowness too in another post.]
A three-hour exam decides in the end
what a student has achieved from the 14 years he spent at school [from LKG to
Grade 12]. How absurd! The internal assessment scores and the practical exam
scores don’t mean anything, I tell you. I know what I’m speaking about. It is
humanly impossible to carry out all the tasks given to teachers in the NEP and
so teachers make it easy by awarding the best possible scores to their students
in the internal assessments.
Exam scores don’t mean
anything much.
A whole range of dimensions slip
through answer scripts.
Does our assessment system ever check
a student’s curiosity that leads them beyond their textbooks?
Does it ever care for the student’s
ethical reasoning and empathy?
Has it ever encouraged a student to
ask uncomfortable questions?
What happens to a student’s
creativity that does not fit the marking schemes?
The depth of understanding that every
genuine and intelligent student hankers after is smothered brutally by our
assessment systems. And we create shallow citizens who can’t even stand the
stress of a bad result of an examination, let alone face the challenges of life!
Does any examination today measure
how a student listens, doubts, connects ideas, or changes their mind? Does any board
of education care to find out the integrity of a student or their imagination?
The qualities that actually shape an
individual – and ultimately the society – are never assessed.
A group of teachers who know how to
reach certain high positions in the board of education decide what is “important”
for the exams and guide books are written by them. Teachers and students follow
those guide books. Because exams are the ultimate purpose of education!
Education has become a transaction.
All the noble objectives of NEP won’t ever be achieved as long as we don’t
change the evaluation system. What you test is what is fostered. Current
testing doesn’t go beyond memory tests. Current testing exchanges marks for recall.
And marks bring in all the approvals.
Something sacred is lost in the
process.

Hari OM
ReplyDeleteYes! For all my academic prowess, exams had me a quivering mess... YAM xx
Whatever be the change of Policy or the method of evaluation, the system remains in the banking mode, where curiosity is nurtured.. Creativity becomes window dressing... Good you had the leeway and the elbowroom to teach English, the way you wished snd visualuzed...
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