Caribbean Examination Council (CXC) agrees to delay regional examinations
The Barbados-based Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) on Wednesday announced a three-week delay in the sitting of the provincial examinations after several calls from local and regional teachers’ unions and at least one education minister publicly calling for a postponement.
CXC Registrar and Chief Executive Officer Dr Wayne Wesley told a regional news conference that the CXC Council decided to delay the writing of the exams.
“The Caribbean Examination Council stands in solidarity with the region and the international community as we grapple with the impact of COVID-19 on our way of life. The Council recognises the impact of COVID-19 on the education system in general and more specifically on the schedule of CXC’s regional examinations,”
Wesley told reporters that the governing board of the CXC, comprising governments, was held on Wednesday “following feedback from regional ministries of education on the timing of the 2022 provincial examinations.
“Members of Council reviewed and reached a consensus on the recommendations from CXC’s School Examination Committee on the strategy for 2022 regional examinations,” Wesley said, noting that “after careful deliberations and consideration of all the pertinent issues”, the Council agreed on a new path regarding the revised strategy for 2022 regional examinations.
“A delay in the sitting of the regional examination by three weeks. This will provide candidates with additional time to prepare for the examinations. Therefore, the examinations will commence on Monday, May 23, 2022, and the results are projected to be released in late August or early September,” the CXC Registrar told reporters.
Last week, Jamaica’s Education Minister, Fayval Williams, said Kingston was seeking an urgent meeting of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD) to discuss the CXC issue and that she had written a letter to the Barbados Minister of Education, Kay McConney, who is also chair of COHSOD, requesting the urgent meeting.
The Jamaica Teachers’ Association had described CXC’s decision not to push back its exams as disturbing. The president of the Barbados Secondary Teachers Union (BSTU), Mary Redman, called for the postponement of this year’s sitting to allow students to adequately prepare themselves after nearly an entire year of online instructions due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
The Caribbean Union of Teachers (CUT) called for a delay of the exam timetable by three weeks to allow sufficient time for teachers and students to complete the syllabi and satisfy the School-Based Assessments (SBA) component; reduce SBA requirements, especially for subjects with a practical part; and advise of the topics to be covered in the examination.
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