For many teachers, news coverage of education seems to be unrelentingly negative. They say this is particularly noticeable in reporting of results of standardised tests such as NAPLAN and the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), which seems to place most of the blame for perceived problems on them.
suffice to say PISA making waves in australia, too! minister says results (lowest since joining) 'incredibly disappointing & alarm bells should be ringing'. suggests new focus on 'core fundamentals' literacy & numeracy. be interesting to see how policy reform unfolds here… pic.twitter.com/C4VALHflNh
— Gareth Evans (@garethdjevans) December 3, 2019
In my interviews with Australian schoolteachers, most of the participants accepted standardised testing was necessary. But they opposed the results of NAPLAN testing being released due to the inevitable comparisons of student progress and schools in the related news coverage. A growing body of research from Australia and overseas suggests teachers’ perceptions about education news are justified. Education news focuses on student discipline, teacher quality, comparisons of testing results and standards. All these subjects tend to be framed negatively.'Alarm bells': Australian students falling behind in maths, science and reading https://t.co/1WtJonbTjb via @theage pic.twitter.com/Vk53bJtQ7J
— MattGolding Cartoons (@GoldingCartoons) December 3, 2019
#EXCLUSIVE | Nearly 10 per cent of Australia’s aspiring teachers are failing to meet basic literacy and numeracy standards. https://t.co/90gAI2s5cS
— The Australian (@australian) July 20, 2020
What teachers say
In my 2017 study, I interviewed 25 teachers from around Australia about their perceptions of news reporting of education — 88% of participants considered it to be predominantly negative. A teacher from a Queensland public school acknowledged that from “time to time” good news stories about schools did appear but said most the coverage was shock, horror, look at all these dreadful things that are happening in the school system. The mostly negative portrayal presented in major metropolitan news outlets was unfair and inaccurate, according to the teachers, and the positive elements tended to be overlooked. One used the reporting of testing results as an example: When the NAPLAN data was published our federal minister had quite a lot of material published about how we were slipping down the league tables, but when our 15 year-olds were rated the fifth top all rounders [in the PISA tests] […] that barely got a squeak.‘It’s a disaster’: Teachers under fire as PISA results leave parents fuming | The New Daily https://t.co/6ofNHNn7dX
— John Carter IPA/LNP DESTROYER ???? (@John25872967) December 4, 2019