Other formats

    Adobe Portable Document Format file (facsimile images)   TEI XML file   ePub eBook file  

Connect

    mail icontwitter iconBlogspot iconrss icon

Salient. An Organ of Student Opinion at Victoria University College, Wellington N.Z. Vol. 21, No. 1. March 13, 1958

The Greater Majority

The Greater Majority

Those who are sceptical about the value of examinations argue that under the present system of marking (in the Arts Faculty anyway) there is no agreed and uniform standard and that favouritism is possible, although, at the higher stages there are checks against injustice or great variety in marking.

To those who value examinations as a test of character, I would suggest that the function of examinations should be to test knowledge and intellectual power and that the student who suffers from nerves, who lacks the temperament to cope with the somewhat artificial conditions of an examination, produces results which are not an indication of his academic worth.

I think there is some point in the third argument, but against it must be set the fact that examinations tend to encourage bad methods of work. Surely the present conditions encourages very little work for most of the year, then hard cramming for a couple of months. But it is Knowledge gained in such a way that is all too easily and quickly forgotten. The majority of education theorists seem agreed that it is best to learn regularly and gradually.

Of course, there are some subjects where it would be quite impossible to dispense with examinations. A knowledge of languages and, I suppose, the natural sciences, would have to be tested in some such way, but in subjects like history, philosophy, political science, psychology, education, etc., if the student were to do eight or nine essays during the year, this together with the cut and thrust of the weekly seminar, should leave the lecturer or tutor in little doubt about the worth of the student. This would necessitate somewhat smaller classes than sometimes exist at present, together with reasonable continuity in tutors, but if the academic year were made about a month longer, if a good level of work were insisted upon, I see no reason why there should be any lowering of academic standards but rather a general gain from steady consistent work, without either stagnation or spectacular bursts.