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Greg Whitby: School ranking season begins

HOW do we stop schools being reduced to a number on a list? To begin with, we need to find better ways of sharing information about student achievement with parents, Greg Whitby says.

Greg Whitby has had parents show him their top 3 school list based on NAPLAN and HSC results with little consideration of other factors.
Greg Whitby has had parents show him their top 3 school list based on NAPLAN and HSC results with little consideration of other factors.

WE ARE heading into what I refer to as the ‘ranking season’, beginning with the release of NAPLAN results in the next few weeks.

In mid-December, there are the HSC results followed up in the media with the top 100 performing high schools.

If anything underscores the problems of publishing this kind of data, it is the fact that parents use this information to make decisions about which school is the best one for their son or daughter. I’ve had parents show me their top 3 school list based on NAPLAN and HSC results with little consideration of other factors.

Despite many attempts to explain that NAPLAN is not a school ranking tool, the HSC is not marked out of hundred and the Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) is not a measure of student intelligence, too many people still see these things as the only measure of success for a school.

The Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) is not a measure of student intelligence.
The Australian Tertiary Admission Rank (ATAR) is not a measure of student intelligence.

Unfortunately, using test scores as the only goal distorts the work of schools. Every child needs to leave school with high levels of literacy and numeracy but schools should also be about developing the whole child — physically, emotionally, intellectually and creatively.

As I’ve written many times before, NAPLAN data was designed to give teachers a greater understanding of how each child is progressing and which areas require more focus. The HSC, is a product of last century. It was designed to sort out the students that were going to university and those who weren’t.

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How do we stop schools being reduced to a number on a list? To begin with, we need to find better ways of sharing information about student achievement with parents. No matter what school a child attends, they should know, every day, that they are valued for who they are. They should also be guaranteed the best learning opportunities the school can provide.

The question we need to ask ourselves is whether we are happy to allow a spot on a graph or a place on a ranking table be representative of a child’s achievement? I know how I would answer. What about you?
Greg Whitby is the executive director of schools for the Catholic Diocese of Parramatta. Follow him on Twitter @gregwhitby

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Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/parramatta/greg-whitby-school-ranking-season-begins/news-story/6cd6060e757fa4c8d08c429eceb00b47