Dr. Siu in the MERS Teachers' Training Workshop for Yaumati Catholic Primary School (28/06/04)
The Basic Competency Assessment (BCA) launched in 2004 aims at giving schools a picture on their students' performance in the four English language skills and thereby provides useful feedback to the teaching and learning of English in schools. The sample items published in the government website give teachers some ideas about the format of the papers, the skills being tested and the marking schemes. This article focuses on discussing the reading and writing papers of the BCA and sheds light on how teachers may, through effective teaching methods, prepare students for the assessment.
A large number of text types are included. In the lower primary reading and writing paper, there are riddles, poems, letters, order forms, book covers and contents pages. Students are asked to read and then make appropriate responses to the above text types. In the upper primary paper, similarly a large number of text types are included. They encompass stories, advertisements, poems, riddles, short plays, letters and instructions.
A variety of reading materials with different text types is essential in teaching and learning English
Therefore, in the teaching of reading, exposure to a variety of reading materials is essential and students' attention should be drawn to the features of the different text types so that appropriate responses could be made. For example, in responding to riddles and poems, students' active imagination is involved. Answers to questions on riddles and poems may require not only factual information based on the text, but also the use of background and general knowledge related to the theme of the text. Similarly, writings related to story endings, poems and other literary types also demand creativity and imagination. However, in responding to book covers, contents pages, order forms and instructions, usually exact information needs to be extracted. Therefore, in discussing riddles, poems and other creative texts, teachers should encourage and allow creative responses. On the other hand, it should be made clear to students that accurate responses based on the reading materials are required when reading instructions and order forms. Students should understand different responses are expected and different skills are used when the text types vary.
Non-verbal responses to reading texts are required especially in the lower primary papers. Reading involves an active collaboration between the reader and writer in creating the world established through the written symbols. It is, therefore, appropriate to ask young learners to express their understanding of the written symbols through choosing appropriate pictures. Benton and Fox (1985, p.18) argue that 'reading a story is an imaginative collaboration between reader and author from which a secondary world is created?
In this regard, the shared reading approach using big picture books is conducive to helping young learners to decode the meaning of written symbols and develop 'visual literacy'. Teachers should employ the shared reading approach where appropriate to support the English curriculum and help students enrich their responses to texts through responding to pictures or creating pictures based on the texts.
In a gist, the writer believes that BCA will provide some positive backwash effects on the teaching and learning of English reading and writing. Teachers should examine their English curriculum and ensure that they have done the following: