Cairns Rebecca
Deakin University, Pigdons Road, Waurn Ponds, Geelong, VIC 3220 Australia.
Prospects (Paris). 2021;51(1-3):331-345. doi: 10.1007/s11125-020-09515-9. Epub 2020 Oct 23.
The global Covid-19 pandemic is testing the responsiveness of school systems. Extensive discourse about disruptions to the standardized examinations students take in their final year of secondary school is symbolic of their high-stakes status worldwide. The interruptions provide an opportune moment to question the efficacy of exams as a measurement of achievement. To explore these issues, this article shares some on-the-ground illustrations from Australian teachers about how high-stakes exams shape their enactment of senior secondary history curriculum. The presence of a , which places a disproportionate emphasis on preparing students for exams, has implications for teachers' curricular practices and wider equity issues. These issues resonate in other international settings, especially during the pandemic. The severity of the Covid-19 economic downturn means it is more important than ever to investigate the relationship between curricular practices and socio-economic structures, to ensure examinations do not compound educational disadvantage.
全球新冠疫情正在考验学校系统的应对能力。关于中学最后一年学生所参加的标准化考试受到干扰的广泛讨论,象征着这些考试在全球范围内的高风险地位。这些干扰为质疑考试作为衡量学业成就方式的有效性提供了契机。为探讨这些问题,本文分享了一些澳大利亚教师的实际案例,说明高风险考试如何影响他们实施高中历史课程。过度强调让学生为考试做准备的情况,对教师的课程实践及更广泛的公平问题都有影响。这些问题在其他国际背景下也引起共鸣,尤其是在疫情期间。新冠疫情导致的经济衰退的严重性意味着,调查课程实践与社会经济结构之间的关系比以往任何时候都更加重要,以确保考试不会加剧教育方面的不利状况。