BY SHANKARI CHANDRAN
At a recent parents’ drinks, I was asked by a mother whether I had made my daughter do any practice NAPLAN* tests. Naturally, I lied like the relaxed mummy that I most certainly am not.
This week my little Prima (aged 8 ) has NAPLAN. It’s her first brush with standardised education and also mine, as a parent.
More importantly, it’s a reminder to myself that Prima might not make the standards set by others or myself.
You see, I can “do” most forms of standardised testing (except reverse parallel parking tests). All you have to do is tell me what the expected standard is, point me in the right direction, and like a greyhound, I will mindlessly chase after the mechanical rabbit. I can’t help it; it’s some weird Pavlovian reaction.
During the Christmas holidays, I printed off a NAPLAN test from the site and I asked Prima to do it. I returned 45 minutes later to find that she had answered a handful of questions and then illustrated the rest of the exam booklet beautifully.
I’ve had years of life coaching (courtesy of a former employer) to control the over-anxious achiever within me and to “learn a new and more constructive dialogue with myself and others”. For example, I almost religiously repeat the following mantra to my children:
-Your marks are not important;
– It’s about doing your best not being The Best;
– It’s about being the best you can be, not being The Best;
– Mummy will be happy if you try your hardest (alternatively insert “best”);
– Learning and having fun is the most important thing Mummy wants.
I wonder if my children sense I am faking it; that despite what I say, their grades really do matter to me. To put this into context, my (fully extended) family and community (you know who you are) are the kind of people who:
– instinctively want to get “full marks” on all tests, including driving tests, eye tests, apgar tests and blood tests;
– ask “What happened to the other 2%?” when you manage a grade average of 98%;
– don’t really believe doing your best is good enough if Your Best is not The Best, despite what that life coach keeps saying.
I have 4 children, which means that our family will collectively sit NAPLAN 64 times ie. 4 (children) x 4 (Years 3,5,7 and 9) x 4 (subject areas); plus 104 school reports plus the HSC = OMG.
So I need to get a grip now. Prima’s NAPLAN is far more a test for me than for her. Prima may answer her NAPLAN questions, she may illustrate them. Who knows? Together we have a long road of education ahead and I want her to love it. I want her to value herself for her strengths and find her own definition of success, instead of being tied forever to the standard one. She’s not a greyhound and lucky for her, she’s not me.
*This piece is not about the merits of NAPLAN, that debate was held last year on Mamamia and it is an excellent read. Nor is it a discussion about the current education paradigm and whether it’s working well or out-dated. If you’re interested, you should check out Sir Ken Robinson:
It’s 11minutes long and more informative than the things I usually search on Youtube (did you know you can watch Knight Rider re-runs on Youtube?).
Shankari Chandran is a recent returner to Australia after ten years in London. Formerly a social justice lawyer, Shankari chronicles the day-to-day of her family’s return on her blog here.
Do your child’s grades matter to you? Do you tell them it’s just the effort that counts? Are you faking it?
Top Comments
I'm now doing two courses, a course in Children’s Services and an Associate Degree. Finished my final year of VCE last year and I don't think that there was anything more stressful than trying to alternate between subjects and even the distribution of studying between them all.
Using NAPLAN tests in Primary and Secondary schools can both have positive and negative educational outcomes. Its positives are that Governments, Education Authorities and Schools and the community can determine whether or not young citizens are meeting important educational outcomes. It helps them to determine where that child may need more help within a certain area, although these NAPLAN tests are stressful and can worry children because they think that they are not smart and that they won’t get a great score. Some parents make their child sit practice NAPLAN while others just tell their child to do their best.
We're seeing a great deal of stress, anxiety, and concern among kids who are being kept in at lunch, being asked to sit practice tests on weekends and during holidays, and who are under increasing pressure to perform because the teachers and the schools have so much riding on the children's performance. O’Keefe, (2011).
There are the negatives of the NAPLAN scores being showed on the 'my school' website, where it shows where schools are ranked around Victoria. This can put a negative impact on children as if their scores come back and aren’t ranked very high it can make children lose self confidence and self-esteem.
NAPLAN tests can also be discouraging as some students aren’t willing to participate in the assessment or some students may have disinterest and choose to sit there and shade random boxes.
References:
O’Keefe, D 2011, ‘NAPLAN nightmares’, Education Review, retrieved 13 May 2012,
http://www.nap.edu.au/About...
A week ago I was helping in class and two children told me that they were practicing hard at home for Naplan. This week I ran into both these parent who asked if we had done work at home for Naplan. I answered honestly no - I work and don't have time. They both told me that they hadn't. What I read from this is that parents coach their children and then lie about it. So I am heading out today to purchase the year 5 Naplan books so we can make a start this weekend. Maybe sometime between two games of soccer, swimming lessons, French horn practice and birthday parties we can get a jump start on them all.
You make me laugh! Thank you for being an honest mummy, I love your work Lynda. x