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It is our CXC: Let us work out a solution
Columns
David Comissiong  
October 5, 2020

It is our CXC: Let us work out a solution

IN the interest of those fifth and sixth form students across our region who have been negatively impacted by the controversy surrounding the declared results of this year’s Caribbean Examinations Council’s (CXC) sitting, it is critically important that a remedial process be quickly settled upon and applied.

However, I fear that the search for such a solution is in danger of being delayed by the many misunderstandings and misconceptions that seem to surround the CXC, and the manner in which those misconceptions and misunderstandings are resulting in “us against them” attitudes and positions.

I, therefore, think it is important that I — in my capacity as Barbados’s ambassador to Caricom – make an effort to disseminate some information as to what CXC is and what it is not.

First of all, it needs to be understood that the CXC is an institution of Caricom, and is therefore owned and financed by the member states of Caricom. It was established by our Commonwealth Caribbean governments in 1972. It was decided back then that the operations of the council would be divided into an Eastern Zone (headquartered in Barbados) and a Western Zone (headquartered in Jamaica). The inaugural meeting of the CXC was held in Barbados in 1973, and Barbados went on to play an extremely important role in its development. In fact, the very first chairman of CXC was Professor Roy Marshall (a Barbadian); the first deputy chairman was Algernon Simmonds (a Barbadian), and the first registrar was Major H Daniel (a Barbadian).

It is important that we understand that CXC is not the headquarters building situated at Pine Plantation Road in St Michael, Barbados, nor is it the Registrar Dr Wayne Wesley.

CXC is actually a 42-member council comprising the vice chancellor of The University of the West Indies (UWI) Sir Hilary Beckles, and three other representatives of The UWI; the vice chancellor and one other representative of the University of Guyana; two representatives of the governments of Barbados, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, and Jamaica; one representative of the governments of the other 12 countries that participate in the council; and one representative of the teaching profession appointed by each of the national CXC committees of the 16 participating nations.

It is important to note that every country that participates in the CXC is required to establish a national committee comprising representatives of its ministry of education and its teaching profession, as well as representatives of its “general community”. The function of this national committee is to “advise the council on matters connected with examinations conducted by the council”.

It also needs to be noted that CXC functions under the auspices of, and is answerable to, one of the “organs” of Caricom; namely, the Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD). The education component of this council consists of the ministers of education of our 15 Caricom member states.

So, let us be very clear that the folks who work at the CXC headquarters building at Pine Plantation Road in Barbados are only employees and functionaries of the council, and their role is merely to administer and implement the policies that are decided upon by the council.

Now, having established that factual background, let us concede that this year of 2020 was an especially difficult year for the CXC, in that the council had to deal with the challenges posed by COVID-19, and had to respond by making sudden changes to the modus operandi of its examinations.

Not unexpectedly, those sudden changes to the modus operandi seem to have resulted in some degree of malfunction, particularly in relation to the more strictly academic subjects tested by CXC. And it seems to me that the malfunction is more likely to have been with the computerised methodology for processing the marks obtained by the students, rather than with the system of marking itself.

To date, the council has responded by establishing a five-person independent review team to consider:

(1) the modified approach that was adopted this year in administering the exams;

(2) the moderation process that was applied to the school-based assessment component of this year’s exams; and

(3) the grading process for this year’s exams.

It needs to be emphasised that the setting up of this review process is not an “intervention” by Sir Hilary. Indeed, Sir Hilary, as chair of the council, constitutes the core of CXC. One, therefore, cannot “intervene” in something that one is intrinsically a part of. So the setting up of this review team should be considered an internal response by CXC to the exam results issue.

The question that needs to be asked, however, is whether this CXC review process will directly address the specific problem that is affecting those 2020 students who have been negatively impacted.

Of course, I cannot be sure about this, but it seems to me that this review process might be more directed at identifying flaws in the new modus operandi with a view to correcting them in time for future examinations.

If this is in fact the case, then all of the parties need to be working on a parallel process that directly addresses the current and urgent predicament of those 2020 students who have been negatively impacted. Perhaps such a parallel process will require the urgent re-examination of the SBAs and multiple-choice papers of those students who the various school authorities across the region identify as “likely” victims of a system that malfunctioned in some of its operations.

We should therefore have no time for finger-pointing and the unconstructive “us versus them” postures.

The affected students are our collective children. There is a very real sense in which they belong to us all. Likewise, CXC is ours; it belongs to us collectively, and it has served us well and done us proud over the years.

Let all parties therefore come together in constructive dialogue and urgently agree upon and put in place a remedial process in which the affected students can have confidence.

David A Comissiong is Barbados’s ambassador to Caricom. Send comments to the Jamaica Observer or dcomissiong@foreign.gov.bb.

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