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The Jamaica Teachersâ Association (JTA) is urging the Government to develop a national policy on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in schools. The push comes following the Caribbean Examinations Councilâs (CXC) decision to overhaul its School-Based Assessment (SBA) framework in response to the rapid growth of generative AI.In a statement on Friday, the association said while it recognises CXCâs responsibility to protect the integrity and international credibility of its qualifications, the changes expose broader challenges facing Jamaicaâs education system.âThe concerns raised extend far beyond the administration of regional examinations,â the JTA said. âThey have wider implications for Jamaicaâs education system and demand an urgent national conversation about teaching, learning, assessment and the responsible use of artificial intelligence.âCXC announced on Thursday that it would phase out the traditional SBA for most non-practical Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) and Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) subjects, replacing it with Paper 032, an assessment completed under examination conditions.The reforms, which take effect from the 2027 academic year, are aimed at preserving the integrity of student assessments as AI tools become increasingly capable of generating essays, reports and other coursework.The traditional SBA will be retained only for practical subjects such as Agricultural Science, Visual Arts, Music, Physical Education, Technical Drawing, and Food, Nutrition and Health, with strengthened moderation measures.Not negotiable Dr Wayne Wesley, CXC registrar and chief executive officer, said the examination bodyâs responsibility is to ensure its qualifications remain credible.âThe integrity of our qualifications is not negotiable,â Wesley said, adding that while the SBA had served Caribbean students for nearly 50 years, CXC had to act when the existing system could no longer reliably assess studentsâ work.The JTA, however, argued that the changes also reflect CXCâs failure to anticipate the speed with which AI would transform education.âCXC appears to have been caught largely unprepared and has, to some extent, become a casualty of the very technological transformation it is now seeking to manage,â the association said, noting that concerns about AIâs impact on authorship, originality and academic integrity had been emerging for several years.While describing the reforms as necessary, the teachersâ body warned that replacing the SBA with Paper 032 addresses only part of the problem.âThe misuse of AI is not confined to students completing SBAs. It affects homework, internal examinations, research assignments, lesson planning, tertiary education and the broader production and evaluation of knowledge,â the statement said.âIt requires a comprehensive regional strategy for AI literacy, ethical conduct and authentic assessment.âUnequal access The association also raised concerns about equity, warning that unequal access to digital devices, reliable internet service, AI platforms and adequately trained teachers could widen educational disparities.It said students should be taught not only how to use AI but also how to critically assess its output, identify inaccuracies and bias, properly acknowledge its use and avoid presenting AI-generated material as their own.To address those issues, the JTA is calling on the Ministry of Education, Skills, Youth and Information to urgently convene teachers, school leaders, parents, students, universities, assessment specialists and technology experts to develop a national policy on AI in education.âSchools cannot be left to navigate these complex ethical, instructional and assessment issues individually,â the association said.Under CXCâs implementation plan, CAPE candidates in non-practical subjects will begin using Paper 032 in the May-June 2027 examinations. For CSEC, schools will have the option of administering either the traditional SBA or Paper 032 in 2027 before the new assessment becomes mandatory in 2028.CXC Director of Operations Dr Nicole Manning said the revised model preserves extended learning while restoring confidence in the authenticity of studentsâ work.âA CXC qualification means something,â Manning said. âIt means something to employers, to universities, to parents, families and guardians, who have invested years of commitment and sacrifice into a childâs education.âeditorial@gleanerjm.com
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