Many high schools in northern Ontario are re-examining final exams
CBC
Just a few hours after her psychology exam, Jersy Houlahan is standing outside of Lasalle Secondary in Sudbury thinking about her mental health.
"I'm a pretty good student and it still stresses me out. It's a make or break for your whole year, right?" said the Grade 11 student.
"So like what's really the point of making something with this big, huge weight at the very end of the year, when everything you've already done leading up to this point is very important to your overall mark already?"
Many schools across northern Ontario are re-examining exams, cutting down how much of the final grade they are worth and in some classes dropping them altogether.
"We still do see exams, we still utilize exams, they're a very important piece, but in some cases we do not use exams at all," said Lisa Spencer, the secondary program coordinator for the North Bay-based Near North District School Board.
The Ontario government stopped making final exams mandatory years ago, meaning they are used in different ways from board to board, school to school, even teacher to teacher.
But Spencer says the trend away from exams accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic when in-person testing was often impossible.
"We recognize the way that students may showcase their learning is different and the weight, the priority of an exam, diminished over those pandemic times as well," said Spencer.
She says it's common for classes like physical education and drama to have no exam at all, while courses like math or history often have an exam worth 15 to 20 per cent of the final grade, compared with 30 or 40 per cent in the past.
Instead of exams, high schools have shifted toward "culminating" projects, essays or interviews.
Grade 12 Lasalle student Damian Savard says he struggled through a math exam Monday that was worth 15 per cent of his mark, while his "culminating" was worth 15 per cent.
"Shoot! Did I remember all the stuff from the first month of my class?" he said, adding that he does enjoy the rush of exam week.
"It's your exam. Your work. It's what's in your head."
Glenda Black, a professor in the Schulich School of Education at Nipissing University, says learning to write an exam is still a skill most students will need when they get to university or college.