Learning Objective: Detailed study on Examination Reform Reports
Reports on Examination Reforms
Examinations are an indispensable part of the educational process. It is necessary to determine the effectiveness of the teaching-learning process and their installation by learns. Schools have taken on the function of examining and screening out on the basis of examinations. Recommendations related to examination reforms given by various reports after independence are following:-
1. University Education Commission (1948-49)
The University Education Commission headed by Dr. S.Radhakrishnan. He states that “For nearly half a century, examinations, as they have been functioning, have been recognised as one the worst features of Indian education. The important recommendation made by the commission is the use of objective tests.
2. Secondary Education Commission (1952-53)
The secondary education commission was headed by Dr.Lakshmana Swami Mudallyar. The summary of Mudallyar Commission recommendations are:
1. The number of external examinations to be reduced.
2. Objective type tests should be included.
3. For assessing overall progress of student school records should keep properly.
4. Symbolic marking instead if numerical marking.
5. In the final assessment due weightage is given to internal examinations and school rerecord.
6. At the completion of secondary school curriculum only one public examination should be conducted.
7. Certificates awarded to the students should include the evaluation of personality attributes and the score of school tests.
8. The compartmental examination system should be included in the final public examination.
9. Internal assessment should be encouraged through continuous and comprehensive evaluation.
3. Indian Education Commission (1964-66)
Indian Education Commission or Kothari Commission headed by Dr.D.S.Kothari. The recommendations on examination reform made by the Kothari commission are:-
1. On the completion of course, at the end of the lower or higher secondary stage, the student should receive a certificate from the school, also giving the record of his internal assessment as contained in his cumulative record.
2. The certificate may be attached to that given by Board in connection with the external examination.
3. Internal assessment conducted by the school should be comprehensive evaluating all those aspects of students growth that are measured by the external examination and also those personality traits, interests and attitudes which cannot be assessed by it.
4. Certificate should be students complete performance but there should be no remark to the effect that he has passed or failed in the whole examination.
5. Written examinations should be reduced and laid stress on observation techniques, oral tests and practical examinations.
6. Classes I to V to be treated as an ungraded unit.
7. At the end of primary stage, no external examination to be held and observation and oral test to be used at this stage.
8. External examination need not be compulsory for all the students of class X or class Xl or XIl.
9. National Board of School Education to be set up at the centre.
10. Establishment of Experimental Schools with the right to hold their own final examination at the end of class X.
11. Recommended a comprehensive examination system to assess a student’s understanding and application of knowledge.
4. New Education Policy (1986)
The National Policy on Education (1986) made the following recommendations:
1. Assessment of performance is an integral part of any process of learning and teaching. As part of sound educational strategy, examinations should be employed to bring about qualitative improvement in education.
2. The objective will be to recast the examination system so as to ensure a method of assessment that is a valid and reliable measure of student development and a powerful instrument for improving teaching and learning in functional terms, this would mean
a) The elimination of excessive element of chance and subjectivity.
b) The de-emphasis of memorisation
c) Continuous and Comprehensive evaluation that incorporates both scholastic and non-scholastic aspect of education spread over the total span of instructional times.
d) Effective use of evaluation process by teachers, students and parents.
e) The introduction of concomitant changes in instructional materials and methodology.
f) Instruction of the Semester system from the secondary stage in a phased manner.
g) The use of grades in place of marks.
h) Improvement in the conduct of examination etc.
3. The above goals are relevant both for external examination and evaluations within educational institutions.
4. Advocated for a shift from a content-based to a competency-based examination system.
will be on the basis of cumulative grading system.
5. Programme of Action(1986)
After the formulation of the National Policy on Education (1986), Department of Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India prepared a Programme of Action for the implementation of NPE.
The policy and strategies for implementation
The policy visualises integration of the assessment of performance with process of learning and teaching and utilising the process of evaluation to bring about qualitative improvement in education.
In order to ensure the method of assessment of students’ performance is valid and reliable, the following short term measures are proposed:
At the School level ii
1. Public examinations will be held only at the levels of class X and XIl.
2. To decentralise the conduct of examinations State School Boards of Education will be set up.
3. Spot evaluation of answer scripts.
2. At the University level
1. Continuous institutional evaluation will be introduced.
2. Letter grades should be given for students performances and assessment based on cumulative grade point average.
3. Provision will made for improvement of performances and external examination will continue.
Conduct of Examinations
1. Innovations and experiments in the conduct of examination can be used.
2. Provision for legislation to define various malpractices connected with examinations.
In order to attain the objectives of integrating the process of evaluation with teaching and learning several long term reforms are proposed:
At the School level
1. The Board of Education will lay down the levels of attainment expected at classes V, VIII, X and XII.
2. The Boards will prescribe the levels of attainment of learning objectives in terms of knowledge, comprehension, communication, application and the ability to learn.
3. Schemes of evaluation for formal examinations and continuous and comprehensive evaluation will be developed.
4. For developing evaluation procedures and in the conduct of examination, a consortium will be set up by Boards of Education.
5. A detailed design will be evolved before setting the question papers.
6. Along with external examinations continuous and comprehensive evaluation of scholastic and non-scholastic aspects of education will be introduced.
7. Evaluation of students’ performances will be on the basis of cumulative grading system.
At the University level
1. The possibility of developing alternate system of evaluation will be explored.
2. Academic reforms visualised in the policy will lead to considerable decentralisation in the evaluation process.
3. An agency will be developed for continuous research and development in the evaluation procedures.
General
1. The credibility of the examination system can he be established by the openness of the examinations.
2. The practice of declaring results in terms of marks/grades in each subject separately.
3. Opportunities to improve candidates grades through subsequent attempts.
4. Question banks will be developed.
5. To ensure objectivity in scoring answer scripts, detailed marking scheme will be developed.
6. Innovative ideas in examination may be experimented with.
7. Separate certificates for internal evaluation and external examinations
8. Intensive training programmes and orientation of teachers will b
National Testing Service
6. Programme of Action (1992)
The NPE (1986) was revised in 1992 based on the experience gained from its implementation and also the recommendations made by the Ramamurti Committee (1990) and Janardhana Reddy Review Committee (1992) of the Central Advisory Board Of Education. The revised formulation called for a new programme of action. Accordingly the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India issued the document entitled programme of Action (1992). It suggested that “to formulate a national examination reform work the department of Education would inter-alia Constltute an inter institutional committee with representations from, UGC, NCERT, AICTE and state level organisations including Board of Secondary Education”.
a. Elementary Stage
1. The Minimum Levels of Learning (MLL) in Languages (Mother Tongue), Mathematics and Environmental Studies for classes 1 to V have been developed by MHRD at the national level. Similar exercises to develop these in the remaining areas and classes of elementary curriculum will be carried out.
b. Secondary Stage
1. Each state board will lay down the levels of attainment expected at classes VIII, X and XII.
c. Higher Education Stage
1. Selection tests for admission to all professional and technical courses will be conducted on all India basis.
3. Orientation programmes may be organised to familiarize teacher with grading system.
d. Strategies Common for all Stages
1. The emphasis will be laid on testing of expected levels of achievement of a variety of learning objectives in order to ensure due importance to higher abilities of understanding, application analysis, synthesis, evaluation and not only to memory.
3. An Examination Reform Centre will be established in higher education for documentation and dissemination of information. At school stage NCERT would perform this function.
5. Some laws will be introduced in the legislation regarding various malpractices connected with examination.
7. NPERC/ Ramamurti Review Committee (1990)
Regarding examination reforms, the National Policy on Education Review Committee (NPERC) under the chairmanship of Acharya Ramamurty in 1990, exhaustively reviewed the observations and recommendations made by different Committees and Commissions
1. The examination reform should be construed as a package
3. Implementation of the package suggested by the NPERC, bristled with Practical problems such as the vast diversities in the education system and the wide spread apprehensions about the credibility of the internal evaluation process.
8. CABE/ Janardhana Reddy Committee (1992)
1. Preparation of status report of examination reform measures under/ taken by the examining bodies.
3. Developing an effective mechanism for coordination, monitoring and evaluation of the implementation of the examination reforms by the different examining bodies.
9. All India Council for Secondary Education (1995)
10. International commission on education by UNESCO
General objectives
2. The pedagogical value of examinations, by making them powerful instruments for improving teaching and learning.
In functional terms, these major goals imply:
2. Placing less emphasis on memorization.
4. Broader coverage of pupil growth in both academic and non-academic areas through the extension of the techniques of evaluation to oral examinations, practical examinations and other observational techniques, and through the use of a wider variety of tools like checklists, rating scales, interview schedules, inventories, and so on.
6. Functional and meaningful declaration of results for effective use by teachers, students and parents.
8. Improvement of the mechanics of conducting examinations.
Specific objectives
1. Reform of written examinations mainly consists of improvements in:
b) Question papers, by making them balanced in various aspects, by limiting options and by the provision of a detailed marking scheme;
2. Reform in oral examinations mainly consists of:
b) Comprehensive coverage of the identified abilities/subject areas of oral examination;
3. Reform in practical examinations mainly consists of:
b) Evaluation of both the process and product of performance;
4. Introduction and improvement in the use of a wider variety of evaluation techniques and tools through:
b) Designing tools such as checklists, rating scales, inventories and observation schedules, for evaluating the above mentioned areas;
d) Developing procedures for the effective use of results of such evaluation; that is, to promote further growth of pupils’ understandings.
PROGRAMME AREAS AND ASPECTS
1. Research studies, investigations and experiments in the areas of external examinations and of school evaluation.
3. Production of literature and evaluation material:
(b) Sample evaluation material in scholastic and non-scholastic areas of pupil growth;
(d) Test library, consisting of an item bank, unit tests based on specific units of content in different subjects, and full tests (based on the prescribed syllabuses) for comprehensive examinations in different subjects for different classes.
6. ‘Clearing house’ functions to disseminate information about examination reform projects, programmes and investigations within the country and abroad.
11. Dharam Pal Committee (1973) – India
12. Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (RMSA) – India (2009)
13. Finland’s Education System
14. PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment)-2000
Since the year 2000 over 70 countries and economies have participated in PISA. Every three years, a randomly selected group of fifteen-year-olds take tests in key subjects – reading, mathematics and science – with focus given to one subject in each year of assessment.
15. GCE (General Certificate of Education) Reforms – United Kingdom
In the English education system both the O level and CSE examinations were replaced in 1988 with the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE), which set out to provide a multi-level examination system catering for all abilities of secondary school pupils.
16. National Curriculum Framework (NCF)-2005
2. Shift from content-based testing to problem-solving and understanding. For
4. Shift toward shorter examinations
6. Availability of multiple textbooks to widen teachers' choices and provide for the diversity in children's needs and interests
8. Development of syllabi, textbooks and teaching learning resources could be carried out in a decentralised and participatory manner involving teachers, experts from universities, NGOs and teachers' organisations.
Primary Stage Classes I to V
2. No formal periodic tests, no awarding of grades or marks, no pass or fail criterion and no detentation.
Upper Primary Stage Classes VI to VIII
2. Assessment should be completely internal with no external board examination.
4. The periodic tests should have both written and experimental components.
Secondary Stage Classes IX to X
2. Examination stress should be reduced.
4. Class X board exam to be made optional (in long term).
Higher Secondary Stage Classes XI to XII
2. The external examination should have some experiment/technology based test items.
4. The students should be permitted to accumulate marks/credits in different subjects at their own pace and not insist on their appearing for examination in all subjects at one go.
Examination Reforms
Paper setting. Examining and Reporting
2. Typology of the question paper must change. The questions could be categorised according to level of difficulty, topic/area, concept/competency being evaluated and time estimated to solve.
4. An examination with a flexible time limit.
6. Each school should evolve a flexible and implementable scheme of continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE) primarily for diagnosis, remediation and enhancing of learning.
8. The performances could be graded on relative not an absolute scale and must be moderated and scaled against the marks obtained in the external examinations.
Flexibility in Assessment
2. Oral testing and group work evaluation should be encouraged.
4. Shift from content based testing to testing higher level competencies such as interpretation, analysis and problem solving skills.
6. Indian exam system needs to be replaced by a more open, flexible, creative and user friendly system.
Board Examination at Other Levels
2. Class X examination should be made as optional as a long term measure thus permitting students continuing in the same school (and who do not need a board certificate) to take an internal school exam instead.
Entrance Examinations
2. Setting up of a single nodal agency for co-ordinating the design, monitor and conduct of entrance examinations.
17. Kerala Curriculum Framework (KCF) – 2007
1. Evaluation has to be continuous and comprehensive and be carried out along with the learning activities. The continuity of continuous evaluation must be ensured.
3. At the upper primary level, along with the terminal examination a written examination could be held in the middle of the academic year.
5. The relationship between continuous evaluation and learning outcome should be Indicated accurately and ensured.
7. Techniques of grading should be flexible, effective and transparent.
9. Teachers should develop suitable tools for continuous evaluation.
11. There should be scope for the learner to evaluate him/herself and should be able to make an answer key.
13. Shift to content oriented questions to the testing of the process of learning and thought process.
15. In IX and X standards there should be opportunity to choose subjects according to one’s taste.
17. Open book examinations, examinations which publicize the questions earlier and online examinations could be introduced.
19. A system that allows the learner to write the examinations only when he/she is ready should be implemented.
21. Teachers and educationists should be encouraged to develop new modes of evaluation.
23. Parents can be made unofficial monitors.
25. The learner should be able to discuss the learning experience with the teacher. Continuous evaluation should help in sharing the excellence and the limitations of the learners.
18. Kerala School Curriculum 2013 – Common Approach
1. Outcome focussed Assessment Approach should be adopted.
3. CCE is carried out in two areas; cognitive area and socio-emotional area.
a) Learning process assessment
c) Unit based assessment
6. While setting the question paper due weightage should be given to thinking skills.
8. Assessment should be done based on indicators in process assessment and Port folio assessment.
10. As part of TE, theory and practicals are included. Xii. For subjects with practicals, the practical evaluation should be done at the end of second year.
12. Assessment in socio emotional area should be carried out as part of the learning process assessment in each subject.
14. The proficiency of the learner in participating activities can be given a special grade certificate.
16. Since the annual examination in class XII is the public examination, the final score of TE in written and practical exams will be the score of the public exam itself.
18. Collective effort and proper monitoring should be needed to make the assessment system for effective.







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