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Standardised Tests in Primary 1 – what’s the fuss?

By Fiona Grahame

Children in Scotland who enter school at Primary 1 have usually had a least 1 year in a nursery class. Also usually they have attended , before Nursery, playgroup, toddlers, book bug sessions and a whole host of other pre-school groups.

During the Pre-school year and certainly in the months prior to entering Primary 1 staff in the nursery will exchange information so that the school is ready to meet the needs of the children. This is just good practice and is normal in Scotland’s schools.

The Nursery staff assess children on a day to day basis and when a parent picks up their child relevant ‘news’ will be passed on – perhaps the successes the child has had that day or anything that may have worried them. Nursery staff also keep records on the child’s progress and this helps plan play/learning experiences.

On transfer to Primary all this information is passed onto the school. Head Teachers are then able to allocate support staff if there are children with additional needs. It is also good practice that Nursery staff work for a time within the school classroom situation.

So it must be a very rare occurrence that a child enters Primary 1 in Scotland with teachers knowing nothing about their development.

The question then needs to be asked: who are standardised tests in Primary 1 for?

Are they for the teacher? well they already know how well the child is doing and where support is needed because 1. they have the records from the Nursery and 2. they have been assessing the children since they entered their classroom.

Are they for the child? well while a child is sitting a test they are learning nothing. The test merely confirms whether or not a child knows something – learning it is not.

Are they for the parent?  well perhaps if a parent has not been talking to nursery staff prior to school or if they never talk to the teacher, attend parent meetings, look at the mounds of drawings that come home, or involve themselves with their child’s homework. The test will not tell any parent anything they did not already know.

Are they for politicians? well yes – politicians like statistics they can quote to other politicians, the media and other organisations. The statistics gleamed from the standardised tests are just that – numbers to be used to justify or not the policies they are pursuing.

The Liberal Democrats have suggested that Primary 1 pupils have been distressed at taking a standardised test. No teacher of any worth would cause a child distress and I find this a highly questionable claim by the LibDems.

What I would suggest is that the tests are worthless for a pupil’s individual progress. 

They will tell you nothing about a child’s social development – how well they are getting on working in groups, listening to others, joining in and helping one another. You might say – pfft, that means nothing it’s reading and writing that is important.  Personal and social development skills are crucial in a child making progress in school. A child who is happy and confident will come on leaps and bounds in their learning.

And now we come to what is really the issue and it’s not standardised tests. 

In Scotland children are put to formal schooling at between the ages of 4 1/2 and 5 1/2 – this is one of the youngest ages in the world to send a child to school.  In most European countries children start school at the age of 6 – in top performing Finland it is 7.

The later age of starting does not hold children back from learning to read and write etc in fact quite the opposite happens. Children  starting school that wee bit older are more confident socially and can take on the more formal aspects of primary schooling. All those elements of getting ready for P.E., going to school lunches, sitting at assemblies – all of these things can be daunting to a 4 1/2 year old  – and that can cause distress.

So what we should be concerned with in Scotland is not the standardised test in Primary 1 which is basically a waste of good teaching and learning time and only of benefit to politicians. What we should be addressing is the young age which we are sending children into the formal school system.

If the Scottish Government really wants to drive up educational standards and eliminate social inequalities built into the system then it must:

Standardised tests will do nothing to address the inequalities in the Scottish education system. Teachers use a range of assessments in the classroom – a one off limited test contributes nothing to individual pupil progress.


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