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Jim Gleeson – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
Assessment is often described as the tail that wags the curriculum dog. Curriculum has featured more prominently than assessment in Irish scholarship. Drawing on relevant policy documents and interviews with senior National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NCCA) and State Examinations Commission (SEC) officers, and relevant documentation,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Context Effect, Secondary Education, Secondary School Curriculum
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Michael O'Connell; Gary N. Marks – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
A small minority of Irish students attend fee-charging second-level schools. However, media analyses of the backgrounds of those students who go on to more sought-after tertiary educational institutions or degree courses suggest that a disproportionate number of them were attendees at fee-charging schools. There are a few reasons why this might be…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Private Schools, College Bound Students
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Audrey Doyle – Irish Educational Studies, 2025
For the first time in the history of the high stakes Leaving Certificate Established examination in Ireland, teachers graded and ranked their own students due to COVID-19 restrictions. In the wake of the process, a questionnaire and focus group interviews explored how teachers engaged with the Leaving Certificate Calculated Grades 2020 (CG2020)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Teacher Role, Evaluators
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McCormack, Orla; Gleeson, Jim; O'Donoghue, Tom – Irish Educational Studies, 2020
The Leaving Certificate programme in Ireland is a two year programme for upper second-level students and culminates in them sitting externally-set high stakes State examinations. Students' experiences of the programme are dominated by these assessment demands and the level of media coverage of these examinations has been deemed 'extraordinary' by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Newspapers, News Reporting, Exit Examinations
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Amalia Fenwick – Irish Educational Studies, 2023
This paper examines the unique challenges faced by the 2023 Leaving Certificate cohort in Delivering Equality of Opportunity in Schools (DEIS) in Ireland due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. It focuses on the significant impact of the pandemic on students who will be sitting their first-ever state examination at the age of 18. These…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Environmental Influences
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Doyle, Audrey; Lysaght, Zita; O'Leary, Michael – Irish Educational Studies, 2021
This paper provides a perspective on the manner in which Irish post-primary teachers interpreted and implemented a set of guidelines created by the Department of Education and Skills (DES) in Ireland when faced with the cancellation of the traditional high stakes Leaving Certificate (LC) examination due to COVID-19. Subject teachers were asked to…
Descriptors: High Stakes Tests, Educational Policy, Program Implementation, COVID-19
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Burns, Denise; Devitt, Ann; McNamara, Gerry; O'Hara, Joe; Brown, Martin – Irish Educational Studies, 2018
The terminal examination of post-primary education in Ireland, the Leaving Certificate, is often criticised for the reliance on memory recall over higher order thinking skills in the assessment process. In order to examine the evidence base for these critiques, this article presents an empirical investigation of the intellectual skills and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Criticism, Student Attitudes, Exit Examinations
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Cullinane, Alison; Liston, Maeve – Irish Educational Studies, 2016
It is widely recognised that high-stakes assessment can significantly influence what is taught in the classroom. Many argue that high-stakes assessment results in a narrowed curriculum where students learn by rote rather than developing higher cognitive skills. This paper describes a study investigating the various cognitive objectives present…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Biology, Science Tests
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Baird, Jo-Anne; Caro, Daniel H.; Hopfenbeck, Therese N. – Irish Educational Studies, 2016
Entirely predictable examinations are ones for which the questions are known in advance. Some assessments are designed this way, but in public examinations, predictability is subtler. Students familiarise themselves with the requirements broadly: likely topics that will come up, question formats and how to maximise their marks. If students can…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High Stakes Tests, Student Attitudes, Test Wiseness
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Doyle, Gavin; Keane, Elaine – Irish Educational Studies, 2019
This paper examines early school leaving from the perspective of parents of early school leavers in an inner-city local authority housing estate in the Republic of Ireland living with the challenges of significant marginalisation. While the vast majority of post-primary pupils now sit a Leaving Certificate examination, and improvements in school…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Dropouts, Trauma, Urban Areas
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Mulcahy, D. G. – Irish Educational Studies, 2012
This article considers the conceptualization of physical education as a Leaving Certificate Examination subject and the place of physical education in a liberal education. Special attention is given to the conceptual evolution of physical education and its intrinsic educational values and to the developments in the idea of a liberal education over…
Descriptors: Physical Education, General Education, Teacher Certification, Exit Examinations
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Borooah, Vani K.; Dineen, Donal; Lynch, Nicola – Irish Educational Studies, 2010
This paper represents an investigation of the broad factors which underpin the success of second-level schools in terms of the proportion of their "sits" who proceed to third-level education and, also, in terms of the "quality" of their educational destinations. It distinguishes between three school types: public (non-fee…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Private Schools, Foreign Countries, Effective Schools Research