Tests ignore the joy of stories
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Tests ignore the joy of stories
https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/tests-ignore-joy-stories
Looking at the tests for Years 3, 4 and 5, there are six writing tasks, a long and a short task in each test. However, out of these six, only one is a story. All the rest are largely non-fiction tasks.
What are teachers to make of this? We would not dispute the need for children to have functional and practical writing skills at their fingertips, even if some of the genres seem wildly un-childlike. But if creativity, imagination and expressive skills are downgraded in the tests, or even ignored, won’t teachers quickly learn that their priorities lie with non-fiction?
Will the National Literacy Strategy be altered to reflect the new priorities? And we all know how popular further changes would be.
Experience tells me that it is fiction that generates enthusiasm among the children, even “joy”. But perhaps that word is now strictly off-limits among the powers-that-be.
Sad, really.
Bob Forster
Headteacher, St David’s school
Moreton-in-Marsh
Gloucestershire
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