Biology may not have pleased weaker students

JUNIOR CERT SCIENCE HIGHER AND ORDINARY: “NOT AN encouraging paper” was the verdict on yesterday’s Junior Cert science higher…

JUNIOR CERT SCIENCE HIGHER AND ORDINARY:"NOT AN encouraging paper" was the verdict on yesterday's Junior Cert science higher level exam.

“We are trying to attract students into science, and this was not a paper that would have done that,” said Crena Shevlin, of Asti and a teacher in St Raphaela’s School in Stillorgan, Dublin.

“There was nothing in it to encourage a weaker higher level student, which was a pity.”

While the paper showed promise in requiring students to know and apply their scientific knowledge, rather than relying on the rote learning of the past, the paper provided little respite for students at the lower end of the ability range.

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“Normally the weaker student might focus on biology,” Ms Shevlin said. “But this year the biology was demanding enough.”

Junior Cert students study physics, chemistry and biology and there is no choice of questions on the paper.

“Anyone who had worked from previous exam papers would have been fine,” said Carmel Crowley, a TUI representative who teaches in Kenmare Community School in Kerry. A question on CFL bulbs was a welcome nod to modernity, Ms Crowley said.

Some of the diagrams on the paper drew criticism.

“I had to do a double take with some of them, trying to figure out what they were,” Ms Shevlin said. “They should be in colour and they need to be clearer.”

At ordinary level, the paper was, “fine”, Ms Crowley said. “The questions were clear, fair and they were appropriately pitched for the ordinary level students.”