AQA report calls for improvement in numeracy, literacy and digital fluency skills
Numeracy, literacy and digital fluency are the skills that will
future-proof our young people and should be the focus for
policymakers, according to education charity and assessment expert
organisation AQA. The traditional building blocks of reading,
writing and arithmetic remain imperative, but we need a more modern
interpretation. If we were writing them now, the ‘three Rs’ would
be numeracy (including finance), literacy (including oracy) and
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Numeracy, literacy and digital fluency are the skills that will future-proof our young people and should be the focus for policymakers, according to education charity and assessment expert organisation AQA. The traditional building blocks of reading, writing and arithmetic remain imperative, but we need a more modern interpretation. If we were writing them now, the ‘three Rs’ would be numeracy (including finance), literacy (including oracy) and digital fluency - because they are the passport skills for modern society, work and life. AQA believes there is a clear and persistent problem in England with low levels of numeracy, literacy and digital fluency. Large numbers of young people continue to leave formal education without a firm grounding in these core skills, leading to poor outcomes in work and life. AQA says this long-standing problem isn’t going away and must be tackled. With political conversations focussing on ‘Maths to 18’ and the ‘British Baccalaureate’, AQA argues that people are looking in the wrong place for the answer. There are lots of good qualifications and assessments out there, but they do a different job: they are there to rank order, and differentiate, whereas we need something where everyone can show their competence. Repeatedly resitting maths and English GCSE or requiring young people to study maths A-level are therefore not the right solutions to the problem. AQA says the new assessment can be thought of like a driving test. Not everyone who gets behind the wheel of a car needs to be Lewis Hamilton, but they do all need to demonstrate the same fundamental skills. And the reverse is also true. Whatever his performance on an F1 circuit, Lewis Hamilton also needs to meet the same fundamental skills and pass a driving test to drive on a regular road. In the same way, having a good grade in English and maths GCSE doesn’t necessarily mean your literacy and numeracy skills are up to scratch: we could all benefit from a refresher course to maintain, or improve, those skills. The call from AQA comes today as it launches a proposal to develop a digital, on-demand assessment of core competences, focused on the fundamental skills and knowledge required to be literate, numerate and digitally fluent. The report explains that while maths and numeracy, or English and literacy, are linked, they are not the same. Literacy is a suite of skills and knowledge that enables people to understand written information and to communicate clearly and persuasively both orally and in writing, in person and when digitally mediated. Being numerate includes being able to understand and make good decisions about financial products, manage budgets, and make sense of tables, charts and basic statistics. AQA also says that, in the modern world, young people need to be equipped with a third and equally important skillset: digital fluency. Digital fluency is much more than reading and writing online or using the latest technology. With the dominance of social media, being digitally literate not only means being able to access and read online content but knowing how to navigate it safely, including cyber awareness and cyber safety. To be digitally fluent, people are required to find, evaluate, create, curate and communicate information in a way that makes them effective digital consumers. AQA sets out in its report the case and context for the new assessments:
Colin Hughes, AQA’s CEO, said: “Numeracy, literacy and digital fluency are critical skills and without them people are much more likely to struggle to gain employment, work out their weekly budget, or even read their children a bedtime story. “But there’s a persistent problem - too many young people are leaving education without the skills they, and our economy, need. We’re having the same conversations about it every year, but it remains stubbornly in place. “So we need a new approach, and we believe the new on-demand assessment we’re developing is the answer. “We’re at the start of this journey and hope to provoke discussion and debate on this crucial area of education. To that end, we will be engaging far and wide as we continue to develop our plans.” Reacting to AQA’s report and proposals, chartered accountancy body ICAEW (Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales) said it supported AQA’s initiative and echoed the critical importance of numeracy, literacy and digital fluency skills to employers. Will Holt, Managing Director, Education and Training at chartered accountancy body, ICAEW said: “Too many young people leave formal education without the numeracy, literacy and digital fluency skills needed for life and the workplace. These core competencies are fundamental to the role of a modern chartered accountant and are demanded by employers across the UK. “Everyone should have the opportunity to develop and practically apply these skills with confidence, so we support this initiative by AQA.” |