Digital Desk Staff
The ASTI has decided to re-enter talks with the Department of Education to discuss how this year's Leaving Cert will work.
The union pulled out of discussions earlier this week over proposals to prioritise a system of calculated grades.
The ASTI now says it has been told that oral and practical exams, as well as coursework, will go ahead.
The union also says it has been assured teachers will not have to rank their students like last year.
ASTI re-enters Leaving Cert discussions https://t.co/zTT0Am6wBS
— ASTI (@astiunion) February 13, 2021
It comes as the Government said it was determined to press ahead with planning for the Leaving Cert this year, with or without the agreement of the Association of Secondary Teachers in Ireland (ASTI).
Despite the union’s decision to pull out of planning talks for the exams this week, a spokesman for Minister for Education Norma Foley said planning will continue this weekend as the Covid-19 pandemic threatens to disrupt the Leaving Cert for a second year.
As The Irish Times reports, the spokesman said Ms Foley was committed to providing “clarity and certainty” to students at the earliest possible time.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin also pledged to “put students first” in Government talks with unions. “Students have to be the number one priority.
They are going through a lot of anxiety and stress and strain right now,” he said. “And all parties to this issue must do what we can to alleviate that stress and that means clarity fairly soon.”
Under draft plans, all 60,000 Leaving Cert students would have the option to avail of calculated grades and complete written exams in June if they wished, according to well-placed sources. No agreement had been reached on how oral and practical exams might feed into this process.
Fallback option
The ASTI, however, said these plans were “unacceptable” on the basis that calculated grades would be the “dominant” option, with the Leaving Cert relegated to “filling in assessment gaps”.
Instead, the union appears to favour a model where exams are compulsory with a fallback option of calculated grades or where students are required to choose either calculated grades or exams.
ASTI officials met Ms Foley yesterday in a bid to find a resolution. Afterwards, the union said it would continue engagement but did not say it was prepared to re-enter planning discussions.
Government sources say a memo on the Leaving Cert, along with school reopening plans, is being prepared for discussion at Cabinet next Tuesday. It is likely to reflect the Coalition’s view that certainty must be provided for students.
Pressing ahead with Leaving Cert plans without ASTI support may place the union in an invidious position where teachers would have to choose between following the leadership or facilitating their students. However, there is a recognition within Government that securing the union’s support is the preferable option.