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Grade 12 marks rising in Ottawa area's French boards

While school boards in jurisdictions across North America have reported grades dropping during the pandemic,average marks for Grade 12 students in two Ottawa-area French boards rose slightly during the first quadmester of this unusual school year.

Slight uptick during pandemic bucks trend seen across North America, education expert says

A close-up of a male student sitting at a desk holding a pencil over a piece of paper
Since the pandemic began, students and teachers have had to adjust to online learning, reduced class time and compressed timetables. (Vetta/Getty Images)

While school boards in jurisdictions across North America have reported grades dropping during the pandemic,average marks for Grade 12 students in twoOttawa-areaFrench boards rose slightly during the first quadmester of this unusual school year.

The French public board, the Conseil des coles publiques de l'Est de l'Ontario (CEPEO), saw marks rise from an average of 76.64 per centacrossall Grade 12 subjects two years ago, to 80.04 per centat the end of the first quadmester.

Ottawa's French Catholic board,theConseil des coles catholiques du Centre-Est (CECCE), saw a similar rise, from an averageof 77 per centtwo years ago to 79 per cent at the end of the first quadmester.

CBC Ottawa requested the average Grade 12 marks in all subjects, as well as average marks in key subject areas such as math, English and French, from all four Ottawa school boards after the end of the first quadmester.

The English boards said they were unable to provide CBC with the data. Only the CEPEO was able to provide a full breakdownincluding average marks in French, math, biology and history.

Why are marks rising?

A CBC questionnaire distributed to teachers last fall revealed their concerns that academic performance would suffer during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some shared anecdotal evidence that students' grades were dropping as they adjusted to online learning, reduced class time, and compressed quadmester or octomester schedules.

Joel Westheimer, research chair in democracy and education at the University of Ottawa, saiddata collectedin the United States shows academic achievement has plummeted since COVID-19 began, with the gap between high-achieving and low-achieving students widening "dramatically."

According to Westheimer, while the Grade 12 data from Ottawa's French boards is "thin"and based only on one quadmester's results, it could indicate that those teachers are being more accommodating this year a move he applauds.

"The French boards are doing what probably makes sense to a lot of people, which is adjusting their expectations to the situation and not putting students' future lives at risk because they happen to be unlucky enough to be in a particular grade at this particular moment in history," Westheimer said.

Education expert Joel Westheimer says school boards need to track and report data on academic performance because 'inequalities that were there before the pandemic are being massively amplified.' (froampsbeg/Shutterstock)

Megan Mathieu, a Grade 12 student at Le Sommet in Hawkesbury, Ont., a school in the area's French public board, said her grades have risen slightly this year.

"For all of my friends and myself, it's easier to do it online right now," Mathieu said.

She said some teachers may be more lenient, but the pace of online learning also suits her better. "The fact that I'm at home and I have the time to do it at my speed I think that makes it easier for me to do my work."

In a statement, the CEPEO did not address why its Grade 12 marks were slightly higher, but noted this school year'smodified learning environmentand said it's"determined to continue to provide a caring school environment that promotes the personal and academic development of each learner."

The Ottawa Catholic School Board (OCSB) said it won't have comparison data available until after the third quadmester begins in February. The Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB) said it does not collate average mark data by course, but would release reports on credit accumulation and achievement rates in the coming months.

'Significant mark drop' in some boards

Harvey Bischof, president of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation, saidpreliminary data from a few boards outsidethe Ottawa area showcause for concern.

"It's suggestive more than it is really sort of determinative at this point, but it shows significant mark drops, and also significantly increased failure rates for those who are learning entirely remotely," he said.

Bischof would not share the early data with CBC, but said "it certainly implies significant trends."

Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation president Harvey Bischof speak to CBC News in 2019. (Michael Wilson/CBC)

"School boards across Canada should be paying attention to this in great detail," Westheimer said. That'sespecially true when it comes to students about to graduate, because unlike the United States, university and college admission here is based almost entirely on grades.

"A global crisis like the pandemic that artificially suppresses those grades not for everyone, but only for certain groups of children is of huge concern and is extremely important to look into," Westheimer said.

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