91原创

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Grade inflation continues at some private schools

Significant discrepancies between marks for course work and provincial exams; mostly among international students
VKA-Fassbender00811.jpg
Education Minister Peter Fassbender: 鈥淚 think if there鈥檚 anything inappropriate that鈥檚 proven to be going on, of course that鈥檚 always a concern.鈥

Eight years after grade inflation was investigated at several small private schools in 91原创, statistics show the practice appears to continue.

An analysis of marks found on the Ministry of Education website shows that at some small private schools, high marks are given to English 12 students who later go on to fail the provincial exam.

The Ministry of Education said grade discrepancies of more than 15 per cent are reviewed during annual inspections.

鈥淚 think if there鈥檚 anything inappropriate that鈥檚 proven to be going on, of course that鈥檚 always a concern,鈥 said Minister of Education Peter Fassbender. 鈥淚 know our ministry staff and inspectors are working diligently on it, so I have every confidence if there is anything, they will find it and deal with it accordingly.鈥

The education ministry may require schools to develop and implement plans to address this issue if it arises, the ministry said in a statement.

鈥淭he student populations at these schools are relatively small, but tend to be heavily weighted to international students. Provincial exams can be difficult for any student, especially ones taking it in a second or third language or with different cultural backgrounds, so it is not uncommon to see a greater divergence between course and exam grades in this demographic,鈥 the ministry said.

An example of the divergence can be found at 91原创鈥檚 Century High School, an independent school on Broadway near Granville Street, where 73 per cent of students got better than a C+ on their English 12 course work and just six per cent of students failed. But when they took the English 12 final exam, just 21 per cent got better than a C+ and 48 per cent failed.

The numbers are even worse at Royal 91原创 College, where all the students got better than a C+ on their English 12 course work, but one-third of them failed the final exam.

As a comparison, at St. George鈥檚, another 91原创 independent school, 100 per cent of students got better than a C+ on their course work, while 92 per cent did as well on the exam. At Kitsilano Secondary, a 91原创 public school, 81 per cent got a C+ or better on their course work and 80 per cent did the same on the exam.

In 2007, The 91原创 Sun reported that five independent schools would be decertified unless they moved quickly to address concerns about large disparities between English 12 marks on provincial exams and those awarded to students for English work in class.

Then-Minister of Education Shirley Bond gave Century High, Kingston High, Pattison High, Royal 91原创 College and St. John鈥檚 International three months to meet specific ministry-imposed conditions. They are all 91原创-based schools that cater mainly to international students and award B.C. graduation certificates. Kingston has since closed.

Fassbender said he is not making any similar threats at this time.

鈥淲e are on top of it (and) ministry staff is looking at it and we鈥檒l see what they come up with, but I鈥檝e got the confidence if there is anything we鈥檒l find it and deal with it accordingly,鈥 Fassbender said.

Travis Woloshyn, principal at St. John鈥檚 International School, said there is always a gap for international students between the course grades and the provincial exam grades. He said his school is working with the ministry and on its own to narrow that gap as much as possible.

For example, the school has introduced three levels of English before Grade 10 English, and doesn鈥檛 allow a student to move on until they are ready. They also added six hours of exam preparation to their English classes.

鈥淚t鈥檚 always going to be a challenge,鈥 Woloshyn said. 鈥淭he provincial exam in English is more designed with native speakers in mind. ... Some of the best students just can鈥檛 wrap their head around the provincial exam process.鈥 In English 12, the provincial exam counts for 40 per cent of the final grade while in-class work counts for 60 per cent.

The University of B.C.鈥檚 Andrew Arida, director of undergraduate admissions, said UBC always gets both the exam mark and the course mark, and where there is a significant discrepancy, the school reserves the right to use the exam mark alone and will revoke admission offers. Last year, there were 91 newly admitted B.C. high school students who had their offer of admission revoked at UBC because of such a discrepancy, Arida said.

鈥淎t the end of the day, we鈥檙e doing our best to make decisions in a fair and equitable manner, but we are utterly reliant on grades from secondary schools and secondary school teachers, and we count on those grades to be accurate,鈥 Arida said.

English is now the only senior year course that has a provincial exam.

鈥淎t the end of the day, those safeguards 鈥 to make sure grades are accurate 鈥 are very important,鈥 Arida said. 鈥淲e know that course grades in high schools in B.C. are as a whole, very, very reliable, but on a case-by-case basis there is no way to know.鈥

The other three schools did not return a request for comment.