Who needs examinations? A story of climbing ladders and dodging snakes

Institute of Education Press (2014)
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Abstract

This short book is an interdisciplinary critique of conventional school examinations for older secondary students. Chapter 1 is about their multiple shortcomings. Chapter 2 asks why they have existed for so long, given that their deficiencies have been well-known for a century and more. It suggests that one factor in the UK has been their value to upper echelons of society as stepping stones to interesting careers; and documents attempts since 1900 to prevent other parts of society from using them for the same purpose, except children allowed as a safety valve to climb the ‘ladder’. The chapter attempts to show continuities between the Coalition’s schools policies and these earlier developments, bearing in mind today’s greater need to attend to democratic legitimation. This chapter continues the theme of social advantage and the protection of privilege concludes by looking at how nineteenth-century enthusiasm for exams was exported from the West to South and East Asia, leading to the so-called ‘examination hells’ that blight schooling there today. Chapter 3 looks at suggestions for replacing school exams with something more educationally defensible.

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Should school students be encouraged to do their best?John White - 2018 - Ethics and Education 13 (3):285-295.

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