Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Swap In Personal Learning And Nix Standardized Testing, B.C.'s Educators Hear

The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2015 02:23 PM
    VANCOUVER — An international education expert has giving the thumbs down to standardized testing in schools in favour of a new approach to teaching that centres on a child's individual talents.
     
    Yong Zhao (zhow), a professor of educational policy at the University of Oregon, told a crowd of experts — including the education minister — that the current system drives creativity down and discriminates against students with diverse abilities.
     
    More than 150 of B.C.'s education policy-makers have gathered in Vancouver with business and community leaders to discuss innovative and controversial options for modernizing the provincial school system.
     
    Zhao says standardized testing, like the Foundation Skills Assessment being administered in B.C.'s schools right now, is a external standard that does not serve children or help them grow into contributing members of society.
     
    He instead suggests giving children ownership over their learning, placing less emphasis on basics and more on learning individually-meaningful skills and making better use of global resources.
     
    The skills assessment tests, written by students in Grades 4 and 7, have long been opposed by the B.C. Teachers Federation which argues that the tests don't help students learn or teachers teach.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Seek Witnesses In 9-Year-Old's Attempted Abduction From White Rock Playground

    Police Seek Witnesses In 9-Year-Old's Attempted Abduction From White Rock Playground
    WHITE ROCK, B.C. — Mounties in White Rock, B.C., are searching for a suspect after a man tried to lure a nine-year-old girl from a school playground.

    Police Seek Witnesses In 9-Year-Old's Attempted Abduction From White Rock Playground

    University of Ottawa hockey team probe was part of legal strategy

    University of Ottawa hockey team probe was part of legal strategy
    OTTAWA — The University of Ottawa is refusing to release a pair of investigative reports into misconduct that led to the suspension of its entire men's hockey team.

    University of Ottawa hockey team probe was part of legal strategy

    Jury Sees Photos Of Grisly Crime Scene At B.C. Home Where Man Stabbed 73 Times

    Jury Sees Photos Of Grisly Crime Scene At B.C. Home Where Man Stabbed 73 Times
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A retired RCMP sergeant who took photos of a crime scene says he encountered blood stains in several rooms of a Lytton, B.C., home where a man was stabbed 73 times.

    Jury Sees Photos Of Grisly Crime Scene At B.C. Home Where Man Stabbed 73 Times

    Police Find Elderly Woman Who Mistakenly Drove From Richmond, B.C., To Kamloops

    Police Find Elderly Woman Who Mistakenly Drove From Richmond, B.C., To Kamloops
    RICHMOND, B.C. — Police say a missing elderly woman from Richmond, B.C., has been located alive and well hundreds of kilometres from her home.

    Police Find Elderly Woman Who Mistakenly Drove From Richmond, B.C., To Kamloops

    Changes slow to come as Quebec town prepares to mark first anniversary of blaze

    Changes slow to come as Quebec town prepares to mark first anniversary of blaze
    MONTREAL — A deep chill that recently fell over Quebec left Yves Desjardins uneasy as his thoughts turned to the tragic blaze one year ago that swept through a seniors' home, killing 32 people.

    Changes slow to come as Quebec town prepares to mark first anniversary of blaze

    Bell Media Says It'd Love To Have A CraveTV App But Apple Hasn't Allowed It

    Bell Media Says It'd Love To Have A CraveTV App But Apple Hasn't Allowed It
    TORONTO — Read through the tweets posted by CraveTV and Shomi and you'll see suggestions that users might finally get Apple TV apps to access the Canadian streaming services.

    Bell Media Says It'd Love To Have A CraveTV App But Apple Hasn't Allowed It