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Teachers’ Lived-Experience in a Dual High-stakes Examination System
Author(s) -
Kaarthiyainy Supramaniam,
Asri Mohamad Nazer,
Siti Zuraida Maaruf
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the european journal of social and behavioural sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2301-2218
DOI - 10.15405/ejsbs.279
Subject(s) - syllabus , curriculum , psychology , confusion , test (biology) , task (project management) , medical education , quality (philosophy) , mathematics education , pedagogy , engineering , medicine , paleontology , philosophy , systems engineering , epistemology , psychoanalysis , biology
The process of preparing candidates for year-end high-stakes examination is a daunting task for teachers. This paper reports on three teachers’ experience of teaching students to sit for the standardised national English exam and IGCSE English, both from two different curricula. The findings from the qualitative case study revealed that the initial workshops that they had attended did not adequately prepare them to teach the new course. However, after a prolonged period of teaching high-stake exam classes, they overcame the confusion and could differentiate the nuanced differences in the syllabus requirements, test formats and contents. The teachers’ initial experiences showed that they relied on the “takeaway” materials provided during the workshops but became more independent in sourcing for materials that could be used for either or both the courses simultaneously. They also transferred their existing knowledge from one course to the other and focused on what was important to answer exam questions. Their teaching approach and practices were aligned to the high-stakes exams. The findings underline the complexities of teachers’ lived experience in high-stakes exam environment, and how they juggle with both curricula needs. Therefore, guidelines and continuous support should be offered to ensure sustainability of quality teaching experience.

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