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Lesson 7
Do Examinations Do More Harm Than Good?
Text
On Eggs and Exams
I've been acting like an egg striking a rock. What is this
egg? It's the campaign against the old-fashioned way of teaching Intensive
Reading . And what' s the rock?. It' s the old-fashioned way of setting exams.
So long as the old type of I.R. examination remains in force, the campaign
against the old method of teaching I.R. can't win. It's like an egg striking a
rock.
Many people agree: Yes, this old-fashioned I.R. (OFIR) is
certainly intensive; it calls for most intensive work by the students. But it
doesn't teach them how to read. The more intensively the students study, the
fewer books they read.
And OFIR doesn't teach them language well either. Learning a
language means learning to use it. OFIR doesn't do that. It teaches mainly about
the language.
Well, if so many teachers and students agree that OFIR
doesn't teach people how to read, why aren't they willing to give it up? Because
of that rock - the rock of the old examination system. If that rock is not
smashed, the egg is smashed. The campaign against OFIR can't be won.
Many I. R. exams, until now, have actually includec reading
material studied during the term. Does that examim how well the students have
learnt to read? No. It examine how well they have learnt by heart the reading
texts and the explanations the teacher has given them. A student might ge high
marks on such .a test without having learnt to read much better than before she
took the course. A true test would consist
of unseen passages. That would show how well a studew could read and how much
she had learnt.
Is that so important? Yes. A college student should know how
to read and should learn to read much and fast. She should, on graduation, have
read hundreds and hundreds of pages, dozens and dozens of books. .
How else can our students inherit the knowledge that mankind
has gained through the ages? For that is what China must do in order to
modernize.
Of course, reading in itself is not enough. We must think -
think about what we read and analyze its content, idea: and ap.proach.
"Cultivate the habit of analysis." That is the aim of education. But
we must have something solid to analyze. We must have some knowledge of the
world, of nature, of society, past and present, Chinese and foreign. So we must
read much. Therefore we must learn to read fast.
Naturally, we do need to know something about the language.
We do need to know some grammar. But grammar is only a means to an end, not an
end in itself. For grammar, after all, is theory. And "what is theory for
and where does it come from ? It comes from practice and serves practice."
The same applies to grammar. So we need to do some intensive reading for the
sake of extensive reading, for the sake of reading whole articles, whole books.
A little theory goes a long way. The final test is practice.
True, reading is far from the only source of knowledge.
Reading without observing life and taking part in life, without experimenting,
will produce bookworms, not modernizers.
This does not show that all kinds of I. R. are absolutely
useless and should be scrappeds. Some I . R . should be kept but it should be
kept within limit. It should not be "the super-power course", riding
roughshod over the language curriculum
and taking over most of the timetable. And what I . R . we keep and teach should
not be so long and so hard that the teacher is forced to use the duck-stuffing,
lecturing method. And it should not just focus on "words, words, words
". It should focus on meaning, on ideas, on understanding, on communication
- on forests as well as on
trees.
But as long as students are forced to get good marks in order
to get good jobs; and as long as teachers want their students to get good marks
so that they themselves can gain fame as good teachers, then everything depends
on examinations. It depends on what sort of exams w e teachers set and the
educational
authorities demand. Until we reform our exams we can hardly reform our teaching
methods.
So let's launch a new campaign, to discuss and reform the
exam system; and at the same time continue the campaign against OFIR, the
super-power. We need to fight on two fronts at once. Otherwise we'll be eggs
striking rocks.
II. Read
Read the following passages. Underline the important
viewpoints while reading.
l. Different Views about Examinations
John: Examinations do more harm than good!
Michae: I agree. We spend so much time revising for examinations
that we
haven't enough time for new work!
Joan: I don't agree. Without exams, no one would do any revision. We
would soon
forget everything.
Linda: That's right. The only time I do any work is when there's
going to be an
exam! That's true of everyone, isn't it?
John: No, I don't think so. Many people work steadily all the time,
and they
remember what they learn. That's better than doing no work for
weeks
and then working all night before the examination. If there were
no exams, more people would work like that, don't you agree?
Joan: No, I don't think so. I think many people wouldn't do any work
at all.
I know I wouldn't.
Linda: Of course not. Besides, without exams, how could an employer
decide whether to give us jobs?
John: The teachers could write reports about us. Examinations can be
unreliable, don't you think so? Our teachers know as well, don't
they?
Linda: Yes, they do. That's why I would rather have an examination!
2. The
General Certificate of Education at O Level
When people discuss education they insist that preparation
for examiriations
is not the main purpose. They are right in theory, but in practice, we all
realize how importarit examinations are. What do you know about the examinations
taken at English secondary schools? Here are a few facts about some of them. .
Pupils who remain at school until they are sixteen normally
take what is called the Geneial Certificate of Education at Ordinary level. The
examination is a subject examination. This means you can take a number of
subjects. Some pupils take as many as ten. The more subjects the better chance a
pupil has of getting a job on leaving school.
3. Homework Row Led to the Death of a Girl
A nine-year old girl was beaten to death by her mother for
failing to finish the day's homework in time.
Liu Lin- was a third-year pupil in a primary school in a
Tibetan autonomous
prefecture in Northwest Qinghai Province: She was one of the best students in
her school, according to yesterday's Workers' Daily.
But on July 10, she did not do her arithmetic homework when
Sun Fengxia, her mother, got home from work at 16:00 p.m.
Sun severely beat her daughter with a rolling pin, the
newspaper said.
By 19:30 p.m. that evening, she found that her daughter had
done only part of the homework, and she became even more angry.
Sun slapped her daughter in the face and kicked her, according to the paper.
Lin became unconscious and later died despite efforts of
doctors to save her.
Such cases are not rare in China.
In December last year in the province, Wu Yuxia beat her
nine-year old son Xia Fei to death . She later committed suicide in a prison.
In Dalian of Northeast Liaoning Province, Li Liansheng beat
his 14- year old son Li Guobin to death in March last year because the boy was
playing truant.
In Nanjing, capital of coastal Jiangsu Province, 19-year old
Wang Lin killed his parents at home because they forced him to try to get good
marks in examinations.
4. Examinations Are Primitive Methods
of Testing Knowledge and Ability
We might marvel at the progress made in every field of
study, but the methods of testing a Person's knowledge and ability remain as
primitive as they ever were. It really is extraordinary that after all these
years, educationists have still failed to devise anything more efficient and
reliable than examinations. For all the pious claim that examinations test what
you know, it is cotnmon knowledge that they more often do the exact opposite.
They may be a good means of testing memory, or the knack of working rapidly
under extreme pressure, but they can tell you nothing about a person's true
ability and aptitude.
5. Examinations Are Anxiety-makers
As anxiety-makers, examinations are second to none. That
is because so much depends on them. They are the mark of success or failure in
our society. Your whole future may be decided in one fateful day. It doesn't
matter that you weren't feeling very well, or that your mother died. Little
things like that don't count: the exam goes on. No one can give of his best when
he is in mortal terror,or after a sleepless night, yet this is precisely what
the examination system expects him to do. The moment a child begins school, he
enters a world of vicious competition where success and failure are clearly
defined and measured. Can we wonder at the increasing number of
"drop-outs": young people who are written off as utter failures before
they have even embarked on a career? Can we be surprised at the suicide rate
among students?
6. The Examination System Never Trains
You to Think for Yourself
A good education should, among other things, train you to
think for yourself. The examination system does anything but that. What has to
be learnt is rigidly laid down by a syllabus, so the student is encouraged to
memorise. Examinations do not motivate a student to read widely, but to restrict
his reading; they do not enable him to seek more and more knowledge, but induce
cramming. They lower the standards of teaching, for they deprive the teacher of
all freedom. Teachers themselves are often judged by examination results and
instead of teaching their subjects, they are reduced to training their students
in exam technipues which they despise. The most successful, candidates are not
always the best educated; they are the best trained in the technique of working
under duress.
7. Exam Is a Subjective Assessment by Some
Anonymous Examiner
The results on which so much depends are often nothing
more than a subjective assessment by some anonymous examiner. Examiners are only
human. They get tired and hungry: they make mistakes. Yet they have to mark
stacks of hastily scrawled scripts in a limited amount of time. They work under
the same sort of pressure as the candidates. And their word carries weight.
After a judge,s decision you have the right of appeal, but not after an
examiner's. There must surely be many simpler and more effective ways of
assessing a person's true abilities. Is it cynical to suggest that examinations
are merely a profitable business for the institutions that run them? This is
what it boils down to in the last analysis. The best comment on the system is
this illiterate message recently scrawled on a wall: "I were a teenage
drop-out and now I are a teenage millionaire. "