Tuesday, December 23, 2025
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

    Chess Players Offered New Play Place In West Vancouver Shopping Mall

    Chess Players Offered New Play Place In West Vancouver Shopping Mall
    Park Royal Shopping Centre manager Karen Donald says players have been offered a new space to be installed on the mall's second floor.

    Chess Players Offered New Play Place In West Vancouver Shopping Mall

    Sweaty Back Leads To Drug Arrest In Kingston, Ont.

    Sweaty Back Leads To Drug Arrest In Kingston, Ont.
    A 36-year-old Oshawa, Ont., man may be watching his back more closely after a bag of crystal meth that got stuck to that part of his body resulted in his arrest.

    Sweaty Back Leads To Drug Arrest In Kingston, Ont.

    Mountie Accused Of Abusing His 11-Year-Old Son Tells Court He Had Constant Nightmares

    Mountie Accused Of Abusing His 11-Year-Old Son Tells Court He Had Constant Nightmares
    Mountie accused of severe, long-term abuse of his 11-year-old son says an RCMP psychiatrist suggested that he play down his history of constant nightmares when he underwent a psychological evaluation before entering the police force.

    Mountie Accused Of Abusing His 11-Year-Old Son Tells Court He Had Constant Nightmares

    Mayor Naheed Nenshi's Uber Comments To Go Before Calgary Integrity Commissioner

    Nenshi was using a rival service in Boston recently when he was critical of Uber's background checks for drivers and used a coarse word to describe the company's CEO.

    Mayor Naheed Nenshi's Uber Comments To Go Before Calgary Integrity Commissioner

    Name Of 'Domestic Violence Court' Constitutional; Man Claimed Discrimination

    A man who argued the name of Ontario's domestic violence court caused him distress and violated his rights has had his constitutional challenge thrown out.

    Name Of 'Domestic Violence Court' Constitutional; Man Claimed Discrimination

    Kelowna City Council Floats Ideas To Nix Image Of 'Lake Monster' Ogopogo

    Kelowna City Council Floats Ideas To Nix Image Of 'Lake Monster' Ogopogo
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Ogopogo could get the heave-ho if councillors in Kelowna, B.C., decide to ditch images of the mythical lake monster from its parade float.

    Kelowna City Council Floats Ideas To Nix Image Of 'Lake Monster' Ogopogo