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UNC activist wants details of top-ranked SEA students - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

COMMUNITY activist and former UNC candidate for Diego Martin West Marsha Walker wants details of the ranking of students on the baasis of the Secondary Entrance Assessment (SEA) exam.

She has made a freedom-of-information request to the permanent secretary of the Ministry of Education for a series of documents.

In her application, Walker, who is represented by attorney Vishaal Siewsaran of Freedom Law Chambers, said the disclosure of the top performers at the SEA was a tradition that had existed for many years.

“It is an entrenched policy that was observed by all governments until July 2022 when the present administration suddenly announced that it will no longer continue with this policy of disclosure.

“No credible explanation or justification was given,” Siewsaran said in the letter to the ministry’s PS.

He also said the ministry had not given any “convincing rationale” for why the ministry had abolished the publication of the top 200 SEA candidates, nor were there public consultations to get views of parents or teachers. Siewsaran also said the decision was “fundamentally flawed.”

The information Walker wants includes: the top 100 ranked students in the 2022 SEA examination and the criteria used to rank them; details of recognition and rewards to top performers before the decision was made not to publish their names; the number of FOIA requests from parents for information on their children’s ranking since the ministry stopped publishing the list; and whether a monetary prize is still given to students who top the exam.

Siewsaran said the publication of the top-ranked students will not affect competition between students, since the SEA was still the entrance exam to determine which secondary school a child would be placed in, and that process was still heavily dependent on a child’s performance.

The attorney explained that Walker had started a research project on the shortcomings in the education system, as she was of the view there is room for improvement.

Part of her research, he said, focuses on the SEA exam, and she believed the rationale advanced by the minister for not publishing the top 200 list was “unconvincing, unreasonable, and politically suspicious.”

Siewsaran also said historically, competition was integral to human development, and pointed to several events hosted by the ministry based on competition including InterCol, the schools’ football and cricket leagues; Junior Panorama, Junior Calypso and Chutney Monarch; the International Mathematical Olympiad; and the National Spelling Bee, among others.

The attorney said any attempt to eliminate competition among students was “farcical, irrational and destined to fail.”

Walker also hopes the information she is asking for can identify why it appears boys are underperforming; whether government schools are underperforming when compared to denominational schools; and what particular denominational board is excelling or failing; whether schools in any particular geographical area are performing better than others; and whether ther

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